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Canadian Industry Statistics (CIS)

Establishments
Wood Product Manufacturing (NAICS 321)

Under this topic you will find information on the number, size and location in the Wood Product Manufacturing (NAICS 321) subsector. You can use this information to assess the existing level of competition within the subsector in your province.




Establishments by Employment Type and Region

The data presented under this heading come from Statistics Canada's Canadian Business Patterns Database which offers statistical information based on the Business Register. The counts were taken in December 2011.

Some establishments do not employ any individuals, and in some cases the employment type of an establishment cannot be determined (indeterminate). Non-employers are in effect owner operated and the owners do not pay wages or salaries to themselves as an employee of the company. Even though some establishments do not maintain employee payrolls, they may have work forces, which may consist of contracted workers, part-time employees, family members or business owners.

The table below shows the breakdown between employer and non-employer or indeterminate establishments for each province and territory as well as a percentage distribution at the national level. For the Wood Product Manufacturing subsector, 34.0% of establishments are non-employers or indeterminate and 66.0% have one or more employees.

Number of Establishments in Canada by Type and Region: December 2011
Wood Product Manufacturing (NAICS 321)
Province
or Territory
Employers
Non-Employers/
Indeterminate
Total
% of
Canada

Source: Statistics Canada, Canadian Business Patterns Database, December 2011.

Alberta
295
163
458
8.3%
British Columbia
862
495
1,357
24.5%
Manitoba
80
54
134
2.4%
New Brunswick
149
47
196
3.5%
Newfoundland and Labrador
54
21
75
1.4%
Northwest Territories
1
0
1
0.0%
Nova Scotia
112
65
177
3.2%
Nunavut
0
0
0
0.0%
Ontario
915
604
1,519
27.5%
Prince Edward Island
17
8
25
0.5%
Quebec
1,092
399
1,491
27.0%
Saskatchewan
60
32
92
1.7%
Yukon Territories
4
2
6
0.1%
 
CANADA
3,641
1,890
5,531
100%
Percent Distribution
65.8%
34.2%
100%
 

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Establishments by Employment Size Category and Region

The data presented under this heading come from Statistics Canada's Canadian Business Patterns Database which offers statistical information based on the Business Register. The counts were taken in December 2011.

The size of a business can be defined in many ways, for example by the value of its annual sales, its annual gross or net revenue, the value of its assets, or by the number of people it employs. In this section a definition based on the number of employees is used.

Establishments are considered micro if they employ fewer than 5 people. Above this threshold, a goods-producing firm is considered small if it has fewer than 100 employees, above that size, and up to 499 employees, a firm is considered medium-sized. The term SME (for small and medium enterprises) is used to refer to all establishments under the large cut-off of 500 employees. For more details, see information on Key Small Business Statistics.

The table below indicates the number of employer establishments by employment size category and by province or territory in the Wood Product Manufacturing subsector.

Number of Employer Establishments in Canada
By Employment Size Category and Region: December 2011
Wood Product Manufacturing (NAICS 321)
Province or Territory
Employment Size Category
(Number of employees)
Micro
1-4
Small
5-99
Medium
100-499
Large
500+

Source: Statistics Canada, Canadian Business Patterns Database, December 2011.

Alberta
81
178
36
0
British Columbia
265
510
85
2
Manitoba
20
52
7
1
New Brunswick
51
85
13
0
Newfoundland and Labrador
26
28
0
0
Northwest Territories
0
1
0
0
Nova Scotia
42
64
6
0
Nunavut
0
0
0
0
Ontario
296
583
35
1
Prince Edward Island
7
10
0
0
Quebec
266
725
98
3
Saskatchewan
13
42
5
0
Yukon Territory
1
3
0
0
 
CANADA
1,068
2,281
285
7
Percent Distribution
29.3%
62.7%
7.8%
0.2%

In 2011, the breakdown of employer establishments in the Wood Product Manufacturing subsector was as follows: 29.3% of them were considered micro, employing less than five employees. Small establishments accounted for 62.7% and medium-sized establishments accounted for an additional 7.8% of the total number of establishments. Large employers, those with more than five hundred persons on payroll, accounted for 0.2% of the total establishments in the Wood Product Manufacturing subsector.

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Number of Establishments - ASML

The data presented under this heading offers an alternative count of establishments for manufacturing industries based on the Annual Survey of Manufactures and Logging. The data cover the years 2001-2010. Due to differences in methodology used to create the establishment count estimates, data from the Canadian Business Patterns Database and Annual Survey of Manufactures and Logging are not comparable. Furthermore, caution should be used when analyzing the ASML counts over time, as this survey has undergone several important methodological changes in recent years. These changes are summarized in the Data Sources section of this site.

Based on the Annual Survey of Manufactures and Logging data, the chart below shows that the number of establishments changed from 3,740 in 2001 to 5,777 in 2010. This represents an average annual increase of 4.9%. Over the most recent year, the number of establishments in the Wood Product Manufacturing subsector decreased by -1.0%.

Number Establishments (ASML) in Canada: 2001-2010
Wood Product Manufacturing (NAICS 321)

Number of 
Establishments (ASML) in Canada

Source: Statistics Canada, special tabulation, unpublished data, Annual Survey of Manufactures, 2001 to 2003; Annual Survey of Manufactures and Logging, 2004 to 2010.

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Changes in Establishment Counts

Establishment counts change primarily due to the net effect of business entries into and exits from the economy. Other factors can also influence these counts.

An establishment is placed into a NAICS category according to its primary business activity - the product whose revenues are the highest in terms of dollar value. If an establishment produces more than one product or service and these activities cross over NAICS boundaries then an establishment could move from one NAICS code to another, diminishing numbers attributed to one code and augmenting another. For example, an establishment could be making steel and plastic auto parts, and the NAICS code to which it is assigned would depend on which product accounts for the largest share of its revenues in a specific year.

Finally, the number of establishments can be affected by methodological changes, i.e. changes in the method of identifying inactive units. This may lead to false interpretation of the economy behavior and this is why Statistics Canada does not recommend using the Canadian Business Patterns data for longitudinal analysis.

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Understanding Business Establishments and Enterprises

For statistical reporting purposes, different types of business entities are recognized, e.g. the enterprise and the establishment. This section deals exclusively with the establishment which is generally in a single location producing a limited range of products.

The establishment, as a statistical unit used in business surveys, is defined as the most homogeneous unit of production for which the business maintains accounting records from which it is possible to compile data on the inputs used in the production process (cost of materials and services, labour and capital) and the gross value of production (total sales, revenues and inventories).

The activity of an establishment can be described in terms of what is produced (the type of goods and services produced) or how they are produced (the raw material and service inputs used and the process of production or the skills and technology used).

Depending on the sector, establishments are referred to by a variety of trade designations. For instance, in the Manufacturing Sector, the establishment generally corresponds to a plant, mill or factory; while in the case of the Wholesale Trade sector, there is a distinction between what are commonly known as agents and brokers on the one hand, and wholesale merchants on the other.

In the sectors dealing with construction, transportation and communications, activities tend to be dispersed. The individual sites, projects, fields, networks, lines or systems of such activities are not normally treated as establishments. The establishment is represented by those relatively permanent main or branch offices, terminals, stations, etc. that are either:

  • directly responsible for supervising such activities, or
  • the base from which personnel operate to carry out these activities.

In contrast, an enterprise, as a statistical unit in business surveys, is defined as the organisational unit of a business that directs and controls the allocation of resources relating to its domestic operations, and for which consolidated financial and balance sheet accounts are maintained from which international transactions, an international investment position and a consolidated financial position for the unit can be derived.

In the case of most small and medium sized businesses in Canada, the enterprise and the establishment are identical. Large and complex enterprises, consisting of more than one establishment, may belong to more than one NAICS industry.