The Hamilton Spectator

New report casts clouds on claims of a widespread labour shortage in Canada

- NOJOUD AL MALLEES

A new report is casting doubt on the idea that Canada is facing a widespread labour shortage and bolsters the arguments by some labour economists that high job vacancies aren’t due to a shortage of workers.

The Statistics Canada analysis finds there are no labour shortages for jobs that require high levels of education, suggesting other factors, such as a mismatch in skills and pay, might be to blame for a high number of empty positions.

In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, labour shortages have grasped headlines from coast to coast as businesses have advertised more job openings than ever. Job vacancies skyrockete­d to more than one million at one point last year.

The perceived countrywid­e labour shortage has put pressure on government­s to help businesses find workers, including by increasing Canada’s immigratio­n targets.

But the report published this week compares unemployme­nt and job vacancies by education level and paints a more nuanced picture of the labour market.

“Things look really different depending on whether you look at vacancies that require a high level of education, versus those that require a high school diploma or less,” said René Morissette, the assistant director of social analysis and modelling division at the federal agency.

The report, which looked at labour data between 2016 and 2022, found for jobs requiring a bachelor’s degree or higher education, there were always fewer jobs available than people to fill them.

For example, there were 113,000 vacant positions requiring a bachelor’s degree or higher education in the fourth quarter of 2022, but 227,000 individual­s who held such an education were unemployed during the same period.

But for positions that required a high school diploma or less, the shortage of workers only started in the third quarter of 2021.

Morissette said the findings don’t mean that there are no labour shortages in some markets, but shortages may not be as extensive as previously assumed.

“It’s certainly conceivabl­e that there are local shortages in some in some positions,” Morissette said. “What we’re saying is that the shortages may not be as widespread as initially assumed in the early discussion­s about the high vacancy rates in Canada.”

For employers trying to fill vacancies that require a post-secondary education, the report says their hiring challenges cannot be attributed to a lack of workers available with those qualificat­ions.

Instead, the difficulti­es may be the result of a mismatch in skills required for the job and those possessed by candidates. Another factor could be that employers aren’t offering wages that are on par with what job seekers expect.

The report also casts doubt on the hiring challenges facing firms trying to recruit workers with lower levels of education.

“The degree to which these job vacancies can be attributed to labour shortages in specific lowskilled occupation­s instead of relatively low-wage offers and fringe benefits or other factors remains an open question,” the report says.

Jim Stanford, an economist and the director of the Centre for Future Work, says the report from

Statistics Canada busts “longstandi­ng myths” about labour shortages in the country.

“If you were really short of labour, and you couldn’t find someone to do that minimum wage job at a McDonald’s restaurant, then why aren’t they either increasing the wage or trying to replace the work with machinery?” Stanford said.

“Neither are happening, which suggests to me that employers in general are quite happy with the current state of affairs, no matter how much they complain about labour being in short supply.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A Statistics Canada analysis finds there are no labour shortages for jobs that require high levels of education, suggesting other factors, such as a mismatch in skills and pay, might be to blame for a high number of empty positions.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO A Statistics Canada analysis finds there are no labour shortages for jobs that require high levels of education, suggesting other factors, such as a mismatch in skills and pay, might be to blame for a high number of empty positions.

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