Canada boosts immigration targets to record amid labour crunch

canada-boosts-immigration-targets-to-record-amid-labour-crunch

Plans to welcome a record 500,000 new permanent residents in 2025

Author of the article:

Reuters

Julie Gordon and Anna Mehler Paperny

Publishing date:

Nov 01, 2022  •  2 days ago  •  2 minute read  •  7 Comments

Canada is struggling with an acute shortage of workers. Photo by Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images OTTAWA — Canada plans to welcome a record 500,000 new permanent residents in 2025 and has boosted its targets over the next two years as the country looks to ramp up arrivals to address an acute labour shortage, Immigration Minister Sean Fraser said on Tuesday.

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Canada now expects to welcome 465,000 new permanent residents in 2023, up four per cent from a previous target, and 485,000 in 2024, up 7.5 per cent.

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“This year’s immigration levels plan will help businesses find the workers they need,” said Fraser in a statement.

He added the new targets would also allow Canada to fulfil commitments to help those fleeing violence and war in their home countries. Canada is projected to reduce the number of government-assisted refugees it resettles by about a third, from 23,550 in 2023 to 15,250 in 2025.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has sharply ramped up immigration since taking power in 2015. The country is on track to surpass its target of roughly 431,000 newcomers this year.

Canada is struggling with an acute shortage of workers, particularly in skilled trades and industries like health care. The most recent job vacancy data showed there were 958,500 open roles in Canada in August and 1.0 million unemployed people.

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Recommended from Editorial Posthaste: Canadians have never been so supportive of immigration, survey reveals CIBC CEO calls for overhaul of immigration policy, highlighting threat posed by labour shortages Lifting work cap on international students a good start, but more needed to tackle labour crisis, experts say David Rosenberg: Canada’s message to the rest of the world: Bring us your workers Many of the unemployed do not have the skills, or do not live in the right areas of the country, to fill those open positions.

The new targets will boost the number of economic immigrants by about 13 per cent between 2023 and 2025, with steep increases in relatively small regional programs that help funnel people to provinces and regions outside major urban centres. A record number of Canadians are now retiring, hastening a mass exodus of Canada’s most highly skilled workers and leaving businesses scrambling.

© Thomson Reuters 2022


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