Alberta

  • Capital city:Edmonton
  • Location:South-western part of Canada
  • Lieutenant Governor:Lois Mitchell
  • Premier:Rachel Notley
  • Official Website
  • Population, persons:4318772 (2018)
  • Land area, square km.:640,081.9 (2011)
  • Population density, persons per square km.:6.7 (2018)
  • Urban population, % of population:83.0 (2011)
  • GDP, millions of dollars at current prices:304708.6 (2017)
  • GDP per capita, dollars at current prices:84,389.6 (2013)
  • Manufacturing sales, $ millions:79,293.8 (2014)
  • Private and public capital expenditures, $ millions:113,822.4 (2014)
  • Retail trade, $ millions:78,711.0 (2014)
  • Employed labour force, persons:2286900 (2017)
  • Earnings, average weekly, current dollars:1,149.4 (2014)

比較

すべてのデータセット: C H M N R
  • C
    • 10月 2022
      ソース: Google
      アップロード者: Knoema
      以下でアクセス: 04 5月, 2023
      データセットを選択
      These Community Mobility Reports aim to provide insights into what has changed in response to policies aimed at combating COVID-19. The reports chart movement trends over time by geography, across different categories of places such as retail and recreation, groceries and pharmacies, parks, transit stations, workplaces, and residential.
  • H
  • M
    • 4月 2022
      ソース: Apple, Inc.
      アップロード者: Knoema
      以下でアクセス: 14 4月, 2022
      データセットを選択
      We define our day as midnight-to-midnight, Pacific time. Cities represent usage in greater metropolitan areas and are stably defined during this period. In many countries/regions and cities, relative volume has increased since January 13th, consistent with normal, seasonal usage of Apple Maps. Day of week effects are important to normalize as you use this data. Data that is sent from users’ devices to the Maps service is associated with random, rotating identifiers so Apple doesn’t have a profile of your movements and searches. Apple Maps has no demographic information about our users, so we can’t make any statements about the representativeness of our usage against the overall population. This information will be available for a limited time during the COVID‑19 pandemic.
  • N
  • R
    • 10月 2023
      ソース: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
      アップロード者: Knoema
      以下でアクセス: 17 10月, 2023
      データセットを選択
      The Regional well-being dataset presents eleven dimensions central for well-being at local level and for 395 OECD regions, covering material conditions (income, jobs and housing), quality of life (education, health, environment, safety and access to services) and subjective well-being (social network support and life satisfaction). The set of indicators selected to measure these dimensions is a combination of people's individual attributes and their local conditions, and in most cases, are available over two different years (2000 and 2014). Regions can be easily visualised and compared to other regions through the interactive website [www.oecdregionalwellbeing.org]. The dataset, the website and the publications "Regions at a Glance" and "How’s life in your region?" are outputs designed from the framework for regional and local well-being. The Regional income distribution dataset presents comparable data on sub-national differences in income inequality and poverty for OECD countries. The data by region provide information on income distribution within regions (Gini coefficients and income quintiles), and relative income poverty (with poverty thresholds set in respect of the national population) for 2013. These new data complement international assessments of differences across regions in living conditions by documenting how household income is distributed within regions and how many people are poor relatively to the typical citizen of their country. For analytical purposes, the OECD classifies regions as the first administrative tier of sub-national government, so called Territorial Level 2 or TL2 in the OECD classification. This classification is used by National Statistical Offices to collect information and it represents in many countries the framework for implementing regional policies. Well-being indicators are shown for the 395 TL2 OECD regions, equivalent of the NUTS2 for European countries, with the exception for Estonian where well-being data are presented at a smaller (TL3) level and for the Regional Income dataset, where Greece, Hungary and Poland data are presented at a more aggregated (NUTS1) level.