Glossary

All A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
R

Regions, development

See Development regions.

Registration

The requirement of a person to be officially approved by and listed with an overseeing organization before being able to work in a particular profession or trade. For example, teachers, plumbers and many medical professionals must be registered before they can legally work. In some professions and trades, registration must be renewed every year.

Resource-based industries

Industries that involve the harvesting, extraction and processing of natural resources. Resource-based industries include all of the primary, and some of the secondary, manufacturing industries.

Resources

Materials, people, equipment and machinery needed to produce goods and services.

Retirement

Permanently leaving a job or career at, or near, the usual age for doing so (e.g., 65) or by choice.

Revenue

Income, particularly for a company.

S

Salary

A fixed regular payment for work made once or twice a month by an employer to an employee. See Wages.

Seasonal employment

The hiring of workers to meet labour demands during a particular season or time of year. For example, retailers are often busiest at Christmas, landscaping companies and nurseries are usually busiest in the spring and summer months, and farmers must harvest their crops in the summer and autumn months. See, also, Temporary workers.

Secondary education

High school or school attended after elementary school, generally following grade 7, 8 or 9 (depending on the province or territory).

Secondary industries

Industries that typically support primary industries. Examples of secondary industries: manufacturing (both resource and non-resource-based); construction; utilities that distribute electricity, oil and gas, or water.

Sector

A grouping of industries that produces related goods or services. For example, the logging industry produces logs, which are sawed into lumber by the wood industry or chipped and turned into pulp or paper by the paper industry. Because these three industries are related, they are typically grouped into what is called the forest sector.

Self-employment

Working for oneself rather than being employed by a company or other organization. Many self-employed people work on their own or with unpaid help from family members. Others have paid employees. Examples of self-employed people: those who run corner stores or other small businesses, farmers, accountants, housekeepers, gardeners, dentists.

Service sector

The sector of the economy made up of industries that provide services rather than goods ranging from transportation, communication, real estate and financial services to retailing, hairstyling, education, health care and public administration.

Skill

The ability to do something (often an activity involving physical or mental dexterity) consistently well, as a result of both practise and natural aptitude. Skills can be developed and improved. They are gained through education, work and life experience.

Skill shortage

A lack of appropriately skilled people available when an employer needs them. Skill shortages may result when:

  • employers cannot fill vacancies because there are not enough job seekers with the required skills
  • employers can find people who have some, but not all, of the skills required (a situation referred to as a “skills gap”)

Succession planning

The process of identifying potential candidates to succeed current employees when the latter leave an organization (usually through retirement). Usually applies to key positions only. The planning process often includes “grooming” the identified candidates well in advance by providing them with, or helping them get, the skills and experience they will need to take over the vacated positions.

Supply (of labour)

The number of individuals offering their services to employers, including new entrants to the labour market as well as those with or without a job.

T

Technology

Machinery, equipment and processes developed using scientific knowledge and information.

Telecommuting

Work somewhere other than at employer’s place of business; may use computer, phone, or mobile applications. Also called remote work or working from home.

Temporary workers

Workers who are hired to meet a temporary need for additional staff and are then laid off after the goods production or demand for services is completed. Examples of temporary workers: additional staff hired by a retailer for the pre-Christmas rush; farm workers hired to help with seasonal harvesting. See also Seasonal employment.

Total job openings

The estimated number of job openings expected over a period of time as a result of (a) expansion demand (new job openings resulting from economic and industry growth) and (b) replacement demand (job openings that need to be filled generally because of retirements and deaths).

Trade (or vocational) education

Higher level of education that may or may not require the student to have completed high school, and that may involve on-the-job training as part of the course requirements.

Training

Acquiring knowledge or skills by performing tasks under the direct supervision of a person who has already acquired the knowledge or skill. Training can occur on the job or in an educational program.

Trend

The ongoing change in a set of observations taken over time.

Tuition

Fee charged to a student for instruction at a school or university.