Move over Boomer: Millennials, Gen Z dominate in the territories, StatsCan says - Action News
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North

Move over Boomer: Millennials, Gen Z dominate in the territories, StatsCan says

The North's populationcontinues to skew younger than the country as a whole, with millennials now outnumbering baby boomers in all three territoriesaccording to new census figures released on Wednesday.

2021 census data show the North's population still trends younger than elsewhere in Canada

Athletes at the 2018 Arctic Winter Games in Hay River, N.W.T. Census data released on Wednesday show that millennials and Generation Z are the largest age cohorts in N.W.T. and Nunavut. Millennials also outnumber boomers in Yukon. (Mario DeCiccio/CBC)

The North's populationcontinues to skew younger than the country as a wholewith millennialsnow outnumbering baby boomers in all three territories,and Generation Z dominatingin Nunavut, according to new census figures released on Wednesday.

"What we're generally seeing is a continuation of trends that have been going on for a while," said Stacey Hallman, an analystwith Statistics Canada.

"[The territories]have some of the youngest populations in Canada."

According to 2016 census data, boomers then stillmade up the largest generational group in Yukon. By 2021,millennials hadedged them out to become the larger group.

It means that all three territories are now out of syncwith Canada as a whole when it comes to demographics. Nationally, boomers people now aged 56 to 75 continue to be the largest generational cohort even as their numbers decline due to mortality.

For the first time, boomers accounted for less than a quarter (24.9 per cent) of the Canadian population.

Meanwhile,Nunavut, the N.W.T. and Yukon all have proportionally larger populations of millennials(people aged 25 to 40) than any of the provinces.

Yellowknife in May of 2021. In the N.W.T., 25.2 per cent of the population were millennials, while 19.2 per cent were boomers. Millennials also made up the largest age group in N.W.T. in 2016. (Sara Minogue/CBC)

In Yukon, 25.2 per cent of the population in 2021 weremillennials, compared to 24.2 per cent for boomers. Generation X (aged 41 to 55) made up 19.6 per cent of Yukon's population and Generation Z (aged 9 to 24) made up 17.1 per cent.

The population is even youngerin the other territories. In the N.W.T., 25.2 per cent of the population were millennials, while 19.2 per cent were boomers. Millennials also made up the largest age group in N.W.T. in 2016.

Hallman says immigration and migration between provinces and territories accounts for some of the growth in the millennial population, since that age group is most likely to move for work.

Gen X and Gen Z also outnumbered boomers in the N.W.T. in 2021, at 20.2 per cent and 20.7 per cent of the population, respectively.

One in 3 people under 15 in Nunavut

Nunavut continues to have the youngest population in Canada, owing to higher fertility rates and lower life expectancy. Nearly a third (32.8 per cent) of Nunavut's population was under the age of 15, and fewer than one in 20 Nunavummiut were older than65.

Generation Z continues to makeup the largest generational cohort in Nunavut, at 28.7 per cent, followed by millennials (24.1 per cent), and Generation Alpha (aged 8 and under) at 19.3 per cent. Boomers make up just 10.6 per cent of Nunavut's population.

Yukon and N.W.T. also had the highest proportions of working-age populations (from 15 to 64 years) in the country, and both were higher than the proportion in Canada as a whole. Among Canadian cities with more than 5,000 people, 13 had populations with a working-age population of more than 70 per cent, including Yellowknife and Iqaluit.

Canada's population aged 15 to 64 years, by province or territory. (Statistics Canada/Census 2021)

The territories also have the lowest proportion of Canadians aged 85 and older. That population is growing in the country as a whole and is highest in Quebec, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick and B.C. It is lowest in Nunavut and N.W.T.

Among Canadian cities (those with populations greater than 5,000 people), the three territorial capitals had by far the lowest proportion of citizens 85 or older. There were 290 such people in Whitehorse (oneper cent) and105 in Yellowknife (0.5 per cent). There was nobody 85 or older living in Iqaluit, according to the census data

Those younger demographics mean that the North has different needs than elsewhere in Canada, Hallman says. For example, the aging population in the South means there's a greater need for certain kinds of health care.

"When you're looking at a younger population, you don't have the same stresses on the health-care system," she said.

"It's a little bit different because if you have a higher fertility rate, you're going to need more health care in terms of, you know, pregnancy and childbirth and pediatric care."

1 in 200 Yukoners are transgender or non-binary

The 2021 census data released on Wednesday also givea clearer picture of the transgender and non-binary population in Canada. According to Statistics Canada, this isthe first time a country hascollected and published data on gender diversity from a national census.

Transgender and non-binary population by province or territory, according to 2021 census data. (Statistics Canada/2021 Census)

The numbers show thatYukon's population, while smaller, hasone of the highest proportions of transgender or non-binary people in the country, second only to Nova Scotia, and slightly higher than B.C.

About one in 200 Yukoners (0.47 per cent) identified themselves as transgenderor non-binary, compared to one in 300 Canadians (0.33 per cent).

The N.W.T., meanwhile, was in line with the national average at 0.33 per cent of the population identifying as transgender or non-binary, andNunavut was well below the national average at 0.14 per cent the lowest in the country.

With files from Sidney Cohen