Statistics Canada has produced modeled estimates of mean liquid assets of economic families and persons not in economic families at the Census Subdivision (CSD) level. Two data sets were used to obtain the final estimates: the 2016 Survey of Financial Security (SFS) and the 2016 Census of Population.
Note that the data quality of these estimates varies greatly by CSD and in many cases should not be used. These data were acquired as part of a larger investigation into the feasibility of using modeling to fill data gaps.
Liquid assets are defined as follows:
Liquid assets = deposits in banks + financial investments + 0.9* RRSPs,
where financial investments include: a) stocks, b) bonds, c) mutual funds, and d) tax-free savings accounts. A 10% withholding tax is assumed when withdrawing RRSPs, hence the use of the factor 0.9 pre-multiplying RRSPs.
Method 1 and Method 2 - CSD-level estimates were produced using Method 1 - no CSD-level estimates were produced using Method 2
The Census Division level data include two estimates of mean liquid assets of economic families and persons not in economic families:
- Method 1 built the model using all liquid asset estimates from the Survey of Financial Security.
- Method 2 built the model using all liquid asset estimates from the Survey of Financial Security, except for the top 1% of the distribution of liquid assets.
Statistics Canada recommends using the estimates produced by Method 1. The coefficient of variation associated with these estimates was generally lower than with Method 2.
A detailed methodology note for these modeled liquid asset estimates is included in the file package.
The model was created using regression analysis of the SFS data and these THREE variables from the Census of Population:
- the mean age of major income earners
- mean family size-adjusted income after tax
- percentage of major income earners who are immigrants
Rationale:
a) As Canadians get older, they accumulate more savings and thus, are expected to have more liquid assets.
b) Higher incomes should accumulate more savings and create greater liquid assets.
c) Immigrants are generally attracted to economically dynamic regions, which are expected to have higher wealth holdings and liquid assets.
Synthetic vs Composite vs Outlier estimates
The Survey of Financial Security (SFS) does not have a sufficient sample size to provide accurate estimates of liquid assets at the CSD level. In CSDs where at least 5 observations exist, an "inaccurate" estimate was made. The final estimates are a weighted average of this SFS estimate and the model estimate, which is called the synthetic estimate. The weighted average is called the composite estimate. In cases where there is no SFS estimate, only the synthetic estimate is used. The data table indicates whether the estimate is synthetic or composite.
Some estimates are labelled as Outlier. These estimates are, in fact, composite estimates. The label indicates that the SFS estimate was excluded from the estimation of the model parameters because they were considered outliers. However, the SFS estimate is still included in the final weighted average of the SFS estimate and the synthetic model estimate.