Things
have changed a lot since the early days of European settlement.
With 13% of the Canadian population, BC is Canada's third
biggest province, after Ontario and Quebec. It produces about
12% of the country's total GDP. Vancouver's population has
passed the two million mark, making it one of only three
metropolitan areas in the country with a population in excess of
one million (although Calgary and Edmonton are fast approaching
that mark). The city is an important financial and industrial
centre, and with its location on the west coast of the country,
it's also a transportation hub.
The composition of BC's
population has changed a lot. It's no longer mainly comprised of
young men, as it was a hundred years ago. The percentage of
males and females living in BC has been roughly equal since the
1960s. The population is also older: less than 40% of British
Columbians are currently under the age of thirty, and one in
four are fifty-five or older.
British Columbia's cultural
mosaic is also shifting. In recent years, immigration,
especially from Asia, has been a major source of population
growth, and the Vancouver area, along with other parts of the
province, is becoming more diverse.
BC's economy is less dependent on
natural resources than it used to be
As the face of the province's
population and its cities has changed, so too has the provincial
economy. A variety of new types of goods and services are being
made available to meet the needs of an increasingly
multicultural population. Technological and cultural changes
have also had a big effect, as have changes in the way companies
do business.
BC's economy has been maturing
into a more diverse, less resource-dependent structure. We're no
longer “hewers of wood and drawers of water” for the rest of the
country or indeed, for the world. Primary goods production is
giving way to a greater emphasis on value-added manufacturing as
well as other types of goods and services production.
The role of resource industries
is declining. They currently employ about 9% of British
Columbia's workforce.
Forestry, mining, fishing and
agriculture are still important, especially in communities where
they are big employers, but they are no longer the dominant
force in BC's economy. Since the mid-1990s, there have been
fewer people working in these industries than in other types of
goods production.
At present, only nine percent
of BC workers have jobs in resource harvesting and extracting
industries such as agriculture, fishing, forestry and mining.
That's down from about 13% in 1990. Employment in other types of
goods production has picked up in recent years after declining
during the 1990s, and accounts for about 12% of all the jobs in
the province.