Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 November 2014
Establishment of a uniform Dominion-wide vital statistical system in 1926 showed Canada to have gross and net reproduction rates above most of Northern and Western Europe and the Anglo-American world. What knowledge we have of trends indicates that fertility has been declining rapidly in Canada. In 1939 the Canadian net reproduction rate was well above unity and the war-time rise in marriages and births will have maintained it at that level. Probably, however, the rising birth-rate of the war years does not indicate any rise in the size of completed families. While the situation in Canada affords no grounds for complacency about that country's capacity to maintain its numbers in the future, there is no suggestion that declining fertility is an inevitable process. By analysing the trends now plainly visible, demographic research may provide a basis for policies aimed at their reversal. The prospect of a declining population may not cause much alarm in some countries. It can hardly be welcomed in Canada, with its empty spaces and undeveloped resources.
This study forms part of a research programme financed by the Carnegie Corporation and sponsored by the Canadian Social Science Research Council. It was completed before the author's employment in the Dominion Bureau of Statistics and is not an official publication of that body. Acknowledgements are due to Dr. R. H. Coats, former Dominion Statistician, and to Professor S. A. Cudmore, Dominion Statistician, for research facilities provided at the Bureau of Statistics; to Mr. J. T. Marshall, to Mr. A. L. Neal, and to Mr. LeNeveu; and to my collaborator, Mrs. Sylvia Anthony.
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