Saturday, November 05, 2022

Canada needs more people, 1.45 million more immigrants to be exact

Ellen Francis, Nov 06 2022 - WASHINGTON POST

Canada is setting record immigration goals to bring in 1.45 million immigrants by 2025 to help plug labour shortages.

“Look, folks, it’s simple to me. Canada needs more people,” Sean Fraser, Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, told a news conference this week.

The government is looking to boost a labour market that has nearly a million job vacancies left in the fallout from the pandemic, he said.


The new immigration plan aims to take in 465,000 people in 2023, rising to 500,000 in 2025.


JAMES MACDONALD/THE WASHINGTON POST
A worker prepares the composite material heat welder in the research and development lab in Victoria, British Columbia.

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The Canadian immigration department says it admitted 405,000 newcomers last year, which was “the most we’ve ever welcomed in a single year”.

“We’re building on that and setting higher targets in the years ahead, because immigration is critical to growing our economy and helping businesses find the workers they need,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted.



The rhetoric from Canada stands in contrast with many Western countries, where officials have talked up curbing immigration and cast migrants as an economic burden.

British Home Secretary Suella Braverman, for example, is facing criticism for describing migrants crossing the English Channel as “an invasion on our southern coast”. In an effort to stem an influx of asylum seekers travelling across the dangerous route into Britain, Braverman has supported a bid to deport people to Rwanda to press asylum claims there – a previous government plan that sparked outrage and hit a legal wall.

Rising border crossings are also at the forefront of polarising issues in the US, where some politically ambitious Republican governors have shuttled migrants to cities led by Democrats in protest over Biden administration policies.

In Canada, often a destination for economic immigration, the country’s growth policy appeared to be less divisive. Immigrants made up 23% of the population this year, the largest proportion in the country in more than 150 years, the census agency announced last week.

Canada has long adopted an approach of attracting immigrants to offset the impact of low birthrates and an ageing population, and reshaped some policies to overcome pandemic-related disruptions to movement and migration.

JOHN WOODS
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at a community event last month. His government wants more migrants to help fill job vacancies.

“Canadians understand the need to continue to grow our population if we’re going to meet the needs of the labour force, if we’re going to rebalance a worrying demographic trend, and if we’re going to continue to reunite families,” Fraser said.

The country currently has about three workers for every retired citizen, Fraser said, describing the targets as unprecedented for economic migration. “We need more workers in every sector in every region of the country, regardless of whether it’s front-line healthcare workers, truck drivers, home builders or software engineers,” he said.

The opposition Conservative party, while critical of the government’s announcement, still expressed support for efforts to increase immigration.

The plan was also met with questions from reporters over whether the government would manage to address the pressure on affordable housing in parts of Canada, and any discrimination or challenges immigrants can face in finding adequate support after their arrival.

While the new plan forecasts a drop in the number of refugees, the UN refugee agency said it welcomed “Canada’s continued leadership on refugee resettlement”.

The policy “makes good sense in many ways,” Canadian refugee lawyer Maureen Silcoff wrote, but urged the government “to focus on the inequities that vulnerable refugees face because of caps”.



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