Canada open to ramping up record immigration, new minister says
BNN Bloomberg
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s new immigration minister plans to maintain, and even ramp up, Canada’s efforts to grow the nation’s labor force with foreign workers.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s new immigration minister plans to maintain, and even ramp up, Canada’s efforts to grow the nation’s labor force with foreign workers.
Sean Fraser, who was appointed to the post in October after Trudeau’s Liberals won re-election, said the government is on track to exceed its goal of offering permanent residency to 401,000 people this year. Speaking in an interview with Bloomberg, Fraser said he’s even prepared to increase immigrant targets -- currently set at 411,000 for next year -- if he deems additional newcomers are needed to fill labor shortages.
“That’s something I’m very much open to,” Fraser said by phone, adding no decision has been made yet on future targets. Any pick up in numbers will be conditional on appetite from businesses and communities for more workers, he said.
The government has until mid-February to provide new immigration targets to Parliament, Fraser said.
Canada has been relying heavily on international migration as its top economic driver, with foreign born workers making up almost the entirety of employment gains over the past decade.
Like other nations, Canada suffers from an aging native-born population and relatively low fertility rates but has been able to produce the fastest population growth in the Group of Seven in recent years. High levels of foreign-born workers, for example, have helped to mitigate wage pressures in Canada in recent months at a time when inflation has been surging.