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Deleted member 1050918
Guest
Yes there won't be shortage of inland applicants but that's what I'm trying to explain. Inland routes only migrate fresh graduates with insufficient experience and knowledge. Canada lacks experienced professionals who are also quite young. If Canada were to remove the outland routes, I wouldn't be surprised to see it losing its edge against Germany or the UK. What keeps Canada competitive in the whole immigration business is its outland routes.Good luck. Point here is that regardless of whatever is going on, Canada is going to have enough people wanting to go there and never have to worry about falling short of candidates. Especially with how laughably easy getting a PR is after a canadian degree.
You can find that out by asking yourself the same question: If you knew you had to spend 2 years as a student both in Canada and Germany just for the sake of getting a PR, which one would you choose? You may choose Canada but you'll see that the answer is not as clear as it would be with Canada's outland routes in the game.