National Post

Canada ups newcomer targets

- Laura osman

• The federal government plans to keep ramping up the record number of new permanent residents in Canada over the next three years as it works through a massive backlog of applicatio­ns that have piled up during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Immigratio­n Minister Sean Fraser said in his newly released plan that Canada will admit 431,645 permanent residents in 2022, 447,055 next year and 451,000 in 2024.

The federal government says it wants to boost its newcomer admissions rate to just over one per cent of Canada’s population by 2024.

Despite Canada’s rebound since the onset of the pandemic, there are still hundreds of thousands of jobs in all sectors waiting to be filled, Fraser said.

In addition, Canada’s population is aging and by the end of the decade the government expects the worker-to-retiree ratio will fall to only three-to-one.

“If we want to be able to sustain our health care system, our public education system, the social services and benefits that are provided by different levels of government, we’re going to need more workers and young families to come here,” Fraser said in an interview.

He said increased immigratio­n will be key to Canada’s pandemic recovery.

Business Council of Canada president Goldy Hyder agreed, and in a statement Monday said an economy that is chronicall­y short of workers cannot achieve its potential. Hyder cautioned the government that the growing workforce must be met with more money for public services, housing and infrastruc­ture.

There is a backlog of more than 1.3 million permanent and temporary residence applicatio­ns as of Feb. 1, mainly due to pandemic slowdowns. Fraser hopes to get processing back on track by the end of the year, and has introduced $85 million and new systems to speed things up.

Some people may have made other plans while enduring the long wait times, but Fraser said he believes people still want to come to Canada. “My sense is, from talking to stakeholde­r organizati­ons, from talking to applicants who would like to come to Canada, that Canada is now and will remain a destinatio­n of choice for people all over the world,” he said. “We should be prepared to welcome more of them by increasing our immigratio­n levels, so long as our communitie­s have the capacity to absorb them and our economy demands them to be here.”

The government exceeded its 2021 target of 401,000 new permanent residents by approving 405,000 applicatio­ns in 2021, the most for a single year in Canada’s history.

Fraser said the government also managed to pivot during the crisis in Afghanista­n, and has committed to resettle 40,000 Afghan refugees. So far 7,550 Afghan refugees have arrived.

While the government projected 60,500 refugees and protected persons will receive permanent status in Canada in 2022, that number has now been increased to 76,545.

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