A video by True North News discusses Canadian immigration policy in the context of the housing affordability crisis. A True North commentator called the Canadian Government’s 2025 immigration target of 500,000 a year “exorbitantly high”. The commentator also suggested that Canada’s immigration policies have failed across the board.
It is true that, according to the Canadian Government, Canada accepted 405,000 new immigrants in 2021, the most the country has ever accepted. However, 2021 was also the year after the pandemic, which saw a large restriction in the number of immigrants and a subsequent decrease in population growth which triggered a desire for higher targets over the next few years. Before the pandemic, Canada was accepting 341,000 new immigrants. If Canada accepts 500,000 new immigrants in 2025, it will have increased the population by 1.2 percent.
The Government also reports that over 60 percent of those immigrants would come from the immigration program’s economic class. These are immigrants who are selected based on a set of skills or educational credentials that have changed over time depending on labour market needs. The government reports they are currently targeting immigrants from sectors facing labour shortages including healthcare and building trades. A further 30 percent of immigrants are accepted as family members of existing residents, and the remaining 10 percent are refugees. Compared to the 1980s, refugees made up 20 percent of total immigrants, twice as much as today. Canada also accepts 20 percent more economic immigrants than in the 1980s.
Historically, immigration has been critical in supporting population and labour force growth. In Canada, immigration levels have accounted for just under 100 percent of labour force growth, and this is projected to rise to 100 percent by 2032. Canada also has a rapidly ageing population and low birth rates which put increasing pressure on sustaining economic growth. The worker-to-retiree ratio is steadily decreasing from 7:1 50 years ago, to 2:1 by 2035. Immigrants also make up a huge portion of many different industries, including 36 percent of people working in the food and beverage industries and over 20 percent of construction jobs.
The video also suggests Canada does not have an issue with a shortage of workers and points to statistics that show a 0.1 point increase in unemployment numbers over the past couple of months prior to July this year. However, this short-term increase does not tell us much about the overall trend of labour shortages. Newer data suggests it has bounced back after July and decreased about the same amount. A more relevant indication of employment trends is the national historical average of 7.57 percent unemployment, compared to our current rate of 5.5 percent, clearly indicating a squeeze in the labour force.