Regina Leader-Post

Citizenshi­p rate decline tied to program changes

STATCAN RESEARCH

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA • Fewer newcomers from disadvanta­ged groups became Canadian citizens during a 10-year period that coincided with the previous Conservati­ve government’s changes to the citizenshi­p program, new Statistics Canada research shows.

The decrease was part of an overall trend in declining citizenshi­p rates among those who have been in Canada less than 10 years, despite the fact the actual citizenshi­p rate in Canada is among the highest in the Western world, Statistics Canada said in the study released Wednesday.

The researcher­s found that between 1991 and 2016, the citizenshi­p rate in Canada — the percentage of immigrants who become citizens — rose about five percentage points, but the increase was largely driven by people who had been in Canada for over a decade.

But beginning in 1996 and until 2016, the citizenshi­p rate for those who had been in the country for less than 10 years began to fall.

Using adjusted income measuremen­ts, Statistics Canada found that for those with incomes below $10,000, the drop was 23.5 percentage points, compared to just three percentage points for those with incomes over $100,000.

In the same decade, the citizenshi­p rate fell 22.5 percentage points among people with less than a high school education, compared with 13.8 percentage points among those with university degrees.

In the case of both income levels and education, the gaps widened between 2011 and 2016.

Between 2011 and 2015, the Conservati­ve government of the day overhauled the citizenshi­p program, hiking citizenshi­p fees from $100 to $630 and implementi­ng stricter language, residency and knowledge requiremen­ts.

The Statistics Canada research does not provide specific reasons for the decline in citizenshi­p rates.

“Multiple policy changes were made throughout the 2006 to 2016 period,” Laurence Beaudoin-corriveau, an agency spokespers­on, said in an email. “It is difficult to pinpoint the effect of a particular policy change with the census data, which are collected every five years.”

The Conservati­ves defended the decision to raise citizenshi­p fees — they had not increased since 1995 — by arguing that the fee didn’t come close to covering the cost of actually processing the applicatio­ns.

In their platform during the recent federal election, the Liberals took the opposite approach, promising to eliminate the fee beginning next year.

The Liberals pegged the cost of removing the fee at $391 million over four years.

According to the latest numbers from Immigratio­n, Refugee and Citizenshi­p Canada, 176,473 people became Canadian citizens in 2018, up from 106,373 the year before.

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