Lethbridge Herald

Aging population will widen labour gap in Canadian agricultur­e: report

-

Canada’s agricultur­e industry will have a domestic labour gap of more than 100,000 jobs by 2030, according to a new report.

The Canadian Agricultur­al Human Resource Council said the forecast represents a 15 per cent increase compared with the number of jobs in 2023 that couldn’t be filled by Canadian residents.

This growing gap is due in part to Canada’s aging population, the council said — more than 30 per cent of the agricultur­e workforce is expected to retire over the same period.

“Labour shortages are one of the most serious issues in agricultur­e because they have a direct impact on our local food security, economic developmen­t and the sustainabi­lity of the sector,” said the council’s executive director Jennifer Wright in a press release.

Another factor contributi­ng to the growing labour gap in agricultur­e is the fact that while Canada’s retirement-age population is projected to keep increasing, the population of young people aged 15 to 24 is expected to remain constant, the report said.

The report also predicts a growing skills gap, as managers make up more than half of projected retirees but younger workers are not expected to be able to fill those roles.

The report said temporary foreign workers will play an important role in narrowing the gap, with about four in five of those 100,000 jobs to be filled by a foreign worker.

However, it said that even with a projected increase in temporary foreign workers by 2030, 22,000 positions will still remain vacant.

Increased immigratio­n also offers an opportunit­y to fill some of the gaps, the report said. Between 2021 and 2022, the number of immigrants entering the sector more than doubled as overall immigratio­n surged, it said.

“This presents an opportunit­y to develop tailored programs to ensure immigrants have the skills required for specific occupation­s in the agricultur­e sector,” the report said.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Migrant workers pick strawberri­es at a strawberry farm in Pont Rouge Que.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Migrant workers pick strawberri­es at a strawberry farm in Pont Rouge Que.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada