This website—How Canada Performs: A Report Card on Canada—assesses Canada’s quality of life compared with that of its peer countries.

We publish an overall report card as well as individual ones that measure performances in six categories: Economy, Innovation, Environment, Education and Skills, Health, and Society. We release the report cards for each category individually throughout the year.

What's New

Canada ranks 14th among 17 peer countries and continues to be a “D” performer on innovation in the latest report card.

On the 12 indicators used to measure innovation performance, Canada gets one “B”, two “C”s and nine “D”s. Canada’s sole “B” is on the number of scientific articles published per one million population.

Canada ranks second to last on a new indicator – the number of international trademarks filed per million population—a measure of services sector innovations and non-technological innovations. Ten of our peer countries had at least twice Canada’s share of trademarks by population.

Countries with the highest overall scores have developed successful national strategies for innovation, giving them global leadership of at least one industry. For example:

  • Switzerland, the top-ranked country, is a leader in the pharmaceuticals industry.
  • Ireland is the host of leading innovative companies.
  • The United States fosters a combination of top science and engineering facilities, broad and deep capital markets, and an entrepreneurial culture.

Upcoming Releases

Upcoming Releases - Report Card 

Did you know...

  • Innovation
    In 2007, almost 17 per cent of all of Canada’s cross-border trademarks were pure services trademarks—the second-highest share of services trademark filings among the 17 peer countries.
  • Education and Skills
    Sweden has a Ph.D. graduation rate three and half times that of Canada.
  • Health 
    Canada has the third-highest rate of mortality due to diabetes among its peer countries. An estimated 2 million Canadians suffer from diabetes, a figure that is expected to rise to 3 million in the coming decade.
  • Society
    There is still a 21 per cent gap between the average incomes of men and women in Canada.
  • Economy
    After 15 years of near-consistent unemployment rate reductions, the global recession pushed Canada’s unemployment rate up to 7.2 per cent in December 2008.
  • Environment
    Canada generates more waste per capita than any other country in the Conference Board ranking. Canada is also one of the world’s largest per capita emitters of greenhouse gases.  

 
Top Myths Revealed
Myth: Canada is a small player when it comes to the aerospace industry.
Reality: Canada ranks 4th among 17 peer countries on its share of world aerospace exports. Aerospace is the only advanced technology industry in Canada that generates a consistent trade surplus. The aerospace industry is more export intensive in Canada than in other countries, with more than 70 per cent of its production exported.

Myth: Canada will never be a science leader.
Reality: International testing of 15-year-old students reveals that Canadian students perform well in the sciences compared with their peers. And Canada’s university graduation rates in both the life sciences and physical sciences are also relatively high.

Myth: Canada is a safe country.
Reality: Canada has 18 times the rate of assaults as the best-ranked country, 9 times the rate of burglaries, and 4 times the rate of homicides.

Resources
How Canada Performs - Executive Summary 2009
Executive Summary 2009 
How Canada Performs
March 24, 2010

How Canada Performs - Executive Summary 2009 (french)
Résumé 2009 
Les performances du Canada
Le 24 mars 2010

How Canada Performs - Executive Summary 2008 Executive Summary 2008
How Canada Performs 2008
November 18, 2008

How Canada Performs - Executive Summary 2008 (French)
Résumé 2008
Les performances du Canada
Le 18 novembre 2008

How Canada Performs 2007 
Executive Summary 2007
How Canada Performs 2007
June 15, 2007