Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

Expanding immigratio­n will not erase racism in Canadian society

- BY THEMRISE KHAN

Repairing our labour shortages through immigratio­n without addressing endemic racism means migrants won’t come to Canada or stay for long.

In its latest immigratio­n plan, the federal government says it hopes to welcome almost 1.5 million new permanent residents between 2023 and 2025, up from approximat­ely one million in the immigratio­n targets for 2020-22. The economic benefits of increased immigratio­n aside, there remains a major elephant in the room that Canada is still not ready to address – racism and discrimina­tion against “visible minorities” – code for non-white immigrants.

While recent surveys claim that public opinion in Canada is more in favour of immigratio­n than ever, recent practices suggest otherwise. Examples include heightened surveillan­ce of select immigrant population­s, intense scrutiny of some of their financial resources and discrimina­tion against migrant workers. There have also been incidences of hate crimes against members of immigrant groups. The government must address the issue of racism in immigratio­n policy with a series of broad measures. Otherwise, if left unaddresse­d, these incidences have the potential to work against Canada’s intentions to continuall­y increase immigratio­n levels and grow its economy.

This is the key failing of the government’s plans on immigratio­n, past and present. Although the latest plan does discuss anti-racism measures much more than previous versions, it is strictly in the context of Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada’s own organizati­onal strategy. Unfortunat­ely, it does not address the real issue – that racism is not just organizati­onal, it is endemic in Canadian society.

A national immigratio­n plan cannot succeed in the long term if it does not acknowledg­e or address racism and discrimina­tion in society. This is important because eight out of the top 10 source countries for immigrants to Canada, accounting for almost 70 per cent of annual intake, are non-white countries from the Global South.

This disconnect is becoming blatantly obvious in many ways. For instance, it is impossible to view the increase in immigratio­n numbers without looking at the impact of regressive laws and policies such as Bill 96 in Quebec on new immigrants.

Racism affects not only our social connection­s with immigrants, but also our economic dependence on them. Canada’s approach to immigratio­n has been to view migrants as a source of labour. That approach is bound to create tensions in the long term.

Immigrants may help with Canada’s labour shortages and aging demographi­cs. But if the environmen­t toward them is socially hostile, the chances of them gaining economic ground decrease substantia­lly. In that case, Canada will no longer be a desired destinatio­n for people wanting to migrate. Or they will leave because the living conditions are toxic.

This hostility is on display in how Canada refers to immigrants in an official capacity. Immigrants are numerical “targets” to achieve in a given timeframe. Internatio­nal students are deemed the “ideal immigrants,” a common racist stereotype. Canada should not attract students based on how much labour or revenue they can provide in the long term – or because many students themselves use this as an opportunit­y to gain Canadian permanent residency – but rather how education can enrich their futures. Immigratio­n levels are about “breaking records,” as numbers are increased based on labour shortages rather than the capacity to absorb new people from different parts of the world.

Phrases used by the government to justify rising numbers, such as “filling labour shortages, creating jobs, and driving economic growth,” perpetuate stereotype­s of immigrants. The term “visible minority,” or the politicall­y correct “racialized newcomers,” indicates a continued “othering” of immigrants. Semantics hide the racist notion that immigrants are only as useful as their revenue-generating skills. Everything else is their own problem.

This approach to reducing immigrants to labels and economic tools completely ignores the existence and reality of racism as a social and economic hurdle for immigrants. Canada sees new immigrants as a way to fill labour shortages, but the statistics tell a different story. New immigrants are far behind their Canadian-born counterpar­ts in finding employment. Yet, the push to increase immigratio­n levels to record highs continues without anyone talking to employers about immigrants’ inability to find work. This may only increase unemployme­nt rates amongst racialized groups.

Racism also applies to our policies toward refugees and asylum seekers. Recent cases have shown how authoritie­s continue to treat refugees from Afghanista­n differentl­y compared with those from Ukraine. If Canada is choosing to discrimina­te among seriously at-risk population­s such as refugees fleeing war and death based on – it can be assumed – their race or religion, this itself proves the point that racism is more than just an organizati­onal issue. It is endemic in our society.

For instance, Canada’s recent appointmen­t of a representa­tive to combat the rise in Islamophob­ia in this country reflects the federal government’s concern that violence and racism toward racialized communitie­s is becoming normalized. But it ignores longstandi­ng racism against the original inhabitant­s of this country.

Indigenous communitie­s continue to be oppressed, and the arrival of immigrants, many of them unaware of Canada’s dark colonial past, only adds to Indigenous communitie­s’ distrust of settlers.

Among racialized communitie­s in Canada, Black and Asian Canadians also continue to experience some of the highest levels of discrimina­tion.

If Canada truly wants its millions of new immigrants to be able to contribute to the country, it must address racism and discrimina­tion as broad societal issues. We need a holistic policy approach, not one that is piecemeal.

To do this, the thinking around immigratio­n needs to evolve and specifical­ly address the following in policy and practice:

First, there is a need to change the language around immigratio­n to Canada. This starts with changing how Ottawa frames immigratio­n and immigrants as a labour supply issue. Immigratio­n is a human right and not a numbers game. It must work for both the migrant and the host country.

Second, immigratio­n is never purely economic. Regular immigrants also attempt to escape conflict, discrimina­tion and political instabilit­y in their home countries. This is important to remember when assessing admissibil­ity and the potential of each immigrant beyond just their economic capabiliti­es.

Third, anti-racism efforts must be incorporat­ed into the philosophy of services provid

ed to immigrants including settlement services, employment, housing, education and health. This will require different federal, provincial and territoria­l department­s to work in tandem with each other, not in silos.

Last, any immigratio­n plan must also come with a strategy that socially protects the rising number of immigrants rather than just economical­ly compensate­s them. Addressing racism and race relations must be important elements when designing immigratio­n policy in a country that calls itself multicultu­ral.

Immigratio­n cannot just be about achieving targets and numbers. It is not an assembly line opportunit­y. Ultimately, we are dealing with individual­s and families who also have hopes and expectatio­ns of Canada. Underminin­g these expectatio­ns through racial discrimina­tion is the last thing anyone seeking to start a new life in a new country needs. ■

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