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Tony Webb's avatar

I was also born in Canada to where my parents immigrated so I know this story well. In 1995 Canada changed the mix of immigrants from primarily family reunification to primarily skilled worker, and slapped a fee on each new immigrant. The popularity of immigration soared.

But there is a dirty little secret behind that, and that is that the Canadian economy does not actually generate that many skilled worker jobs. This is most blatant in fields like medicine, where being a doctor gets you immigration points but a Canadian med school degree is required to actually practise. But almost across the board, immigrants deskill to a greater degree than elsewhere. Their earnings remain lower than locally born Canadians, and usually fails to converge in their entire lives.

The real truth Canada stumbled upon is that, by filtering for post-secondary education, Canada ends up with immigrants who almost never end up on welfare or commit crimes. Not merely less welfare and crime than the locally born; that's not enough to satisfy the public. It has to be zero.

The reason the post-2022 surge in temporary workers and students broke this consensus is that that was a much more average group of people, a few of whom did commit crimes and go on welfare. Hence the unpopularity.

Matt Burgess's avatar

As a Canadian, I agree that Canada exemplifies your thesis: they had selective orderly immigration for years and people liked it, and then it got less selective and orderly (e.g. through diploma mills, letting in IRGC operatives allegedly, not paying enough attention to integration, etc.) and people liked it less, and now they're taking small steps to right the ship and opinion is taking small steps in favor again.

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