Oh I totally missed that.Yes, because the title of the documents says in Persons.
Oh I totally missed that.Yes, because the title of the documents says in Persons.
This is great data. The only thing I would add is that, based on the documents, IRCC seems to be working at approximately 30,000/month in 1-year moving average, with the last 3 months at around 26,500/month. This means 40,000 applications / month is too optimistic. If we assume that the all-time high processing is attributed to the CEC mega-draws, and the typical processing speed is closer to 27,000/month. Then all application would be assessed by the end of 10-months (Sep 2022) or Oct 2022 if <1% is rejected.Lets get to analyzing now, because this speculating nonsense is worthless.
According to the document below:
Authorizations and Visas Issued for Permanent Residents (in Persons) by Month, January 2018 to August 2021
https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/9b34e712-513f-44e9-babf-9df4f7256550/resource/07139405-03f0-40f8-8dbc-bc6025fce2ab?inner_span=True
There were 42,355 Authorizations and Visas issued in August 2021
A total of 239,847 Authorizations and Visas were issued in 2021.
- January 28,107
- February 22,111
- March 24,173
- April 23,260
- May 20,496
- June 39,094
- July 40,251
- August 42,355
In 2020 were issued 171,005 and in 2019 were issued 340,266.
According to the document below:
Applications Received for Permanent Residency (in Persons) by Month, January 2018 to August 2021
https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/9b34e712-513f-44e9-babf-9df4f7256550/resource/fdc69618-dd90-4f38-b040-3046ee6657db?inner_span=True
In 2021 there were 255,312 applications received. In 2020 there were 328,266 and in 2019 there were 432,095.
A total of 1,015,673.
So, by doing a simple math here:
(Applications received) - (Authorizations and Visas issued) = 1,015,673 - 751118 = 264,555 applications.
Should we say that 10% of them were rejected?
So, that will leave us with 238,100 pending applications to be assessed.
At 40,000 a month processing speed, all the applications would be assessed by the end of April 2022, excluding the complex ones.
If anyone has anything to add or argue, please do!
That's one way to look at it, although given the numbers, my guess is that they'll keep drawing PNP-only until around Feb/March. Then proceed with all-program draws from there, probably with the 3,900 magic number from pre-pandemic times. I'm thinking that IRCC would want to maintain some level of "in-process" applications so that the employees won't run out of work.Good news for post AOR people. But the original post by @ElvisRamaj indicated that if all program draws resume by January, we'd get in by <whatever month> 2022. This is unlikely. If all program draws resume next year, they will add to the current backlog. 2022 Outland AORs will NOT get their PPRs in 2022. Stop dreaming. More likely is that they will resume CEC draws in January 2022, and keep that up. Owing to the ease of processing and landing (something touched upon in the meetings), these 2022 CECs can expect to be processed in 2022.
What seems more likely is they'll keep up the PNP/CEC draws till July of next year, clear out a majority of the backlog, and then resume all program draws in July/September like they did in 2020. Any pre ITA outlanders expecting to get a PR before mid to late 2023 is in for a rude awakening.
2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
Canadian Experience | 27,465 | 30,225 | 24,970 | 79,795 |
Provincial Nominee Program | 17,965 | 20,015 | 14,095 | 10,680 |
Skilled Trade | 875 | 1,180 | 565 | 105 |
Skilled Worker | 45,925 | 58,185 | 24,260 | 5,115 |
Total | 92,230 | 109,600 | 63,890 | 95,700 |
lmfao IRCC "working"so that the employees won't run out of work.
Great analysis. But I’m sorry to spoil the party with one huge hole in the numbers if you’re a FSW applicant lol. It assumes they already already processing the backlog. But in reality, they are just processing newer CEC applications faster to make up for the 6 month processing stat and the overall annual numbers. If you look at the 2020 and 2021 numbers, FSW approvals are significantly lower compared to even newer CEC application approvals. According to the processing status page, they are now working on CECs from March/April 2021. So question here is when they would actually pick up the FSW backlog instead of just sending endless ITAs and approvals to CEC. If they pick up the backlog, then april 2022 sounds good for FSW. If they don’t and they continue with CEC, no one can tell. It’s not like IRCC is transparent in any way about what they are going to do with pending FSWs from as early as 2019Another interesting statistic concerning only Express Entry.
If we take all the ITA sent from 2018 up to now, we have:
Making a total of 293,715 ITA sent.
- In 2018 89,800
- 89,100 All Program
- 200 PNP
- 500 Skilled Trades
- In 2019 85,300
- 84,300 All Program
- 1,000 Skilled Trades
- In 2020 107,350
- 68,100 All Program
- 4,785 PNP
- 32,215 CEC
- In 2021 111,265
- 97,653 CEC
- 11,612 PNP
According to the document below:
Admissions of Permanent Residents under Express Entry by Province/Territory of Intended Destination and Immigration Category, January 2015 - August 2021
https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/52e4b14b-597a-4ecf-a184-23a6e69b0d57/resource/88e63879-f893-4edf-af84-70418b5ec114?inner_span=True
We have the following admissions of permanent residents:
2018 2019 2020 2021Canadian Experience 27,465 30,225 24,970 79,795Provincial Nominee Program 17,965 20,015 14,095 10,680Skilled Trade 875 1,180 565 105Skilled Worker 45,925 58,185 24,260 5,115Total 92,230 109,600 63,890 95,700
As you can see from the table, this year they will definitely surpass 2019 in terms of the volume of processing the applications, even though their work picked up pace in June.
Look for yourself the number of admissions per month this year:
So, YES!
- January 7205
- February 7910
- March 9780
- April 7950
- May 6840
- June 18470
- July 19210
- August 18335
2022 will be a beautiful year for all of us.
How did you come up with July 2022? I didn't get it. If they have the plan to resume cec draws by Jan till July, why they have reduced and then halted invitations for the past 3 months(and most likely the rest of the year)?Good news for post AOR people. But the original post by @ElvisRamaj indicated that if all program draws resume by January, we'd get in by <whatever month> 2022. This is unlikely. If all program draws resume next year, they will add to the current backlog. 2022 Outland AORs will NOT get their PPRs in 2022. Stop dreaming. More likely is that they will resume CEC draws in January 2022, and keep that up. Owing to the ease of processing and landing (something touched upon in the meetings), these 2022 CECs can expect to be processed in 2022.
What seems more likely is they'll keep up the PNP/CEC draws till July of next year, clear out a majority of the backlog, and then resume all program draws in July/September like they did in 2020. Any pre ITA outlanders expecting to get a PR before mid to late 2023 is in for a rude awakening.
I am going to ask the reporter. Because this report is shocking and has already created a jitter in various platforms.You can try and ask the journalist, but my guess is that they invoked the access to information act to get the number. If you're a resident, or citizen or know someone who is, you can try and ask the government what's the latest numbers are. I think this is the same act that the GCMS providers invoke to get your GCMS note.
Like I said in my post "like they did in 2020". They did CEC only draws from January to roughly July 2020. They can easily repeat that because now they have precedent. They have reduced the numbers and halted invitations because of the shift in focus to refugees, and the fact that they already have more than enough ITAs issued to meet the high end of this year's targets. Because of this temporary halt in ITAs right now, they may want to resume CEC only draws to get a head start on their 2022 targets because they're easier to process than FSW. Realize that they also have around 50k FSW applications in the pipeline already, many of them close to completion. That's already half of their 2022 targets. Once they have enough of a backlog of CECs in the pipeline, they may reluctantly resume FSW in the second half of 2022. They have absolutely NO reason whatsoever to resume FSW. They may feel sorry for us and have a couple of FSW draws, but we aren't refugees, old, or tourists from rich countries. So I doubt they'll actually do that.How did you come up with July 2022? I didn't get it. If they have the plan to resume cec draws by Jan till July, why they have reduced and then halted invitations for the past 3 months(and most likely the rest of the year)?
Just asked for a clarification:I am going to ask the reporter. Because this report is shocking and has already created a jitter in various platforms.
Yes, I am a FSW applicant. Almost everyone here is.Great analysis. But I’m sorry to spoil the party with one huge hole in the numbers if you’re a FSW applicant lol. It assumes they already already processing the backlog. But in reality, they are just processing newer CEC applications faster to make up for the 6 month processing stat and the overall annual numbers. If you look at the 2020 and 2021 numbers, FSW approvals are significantly lower compared to even newer CEC application approvals. According to the processing status page, they are now working on CECs from March/April 2021. So question here is when they would actually pick up the FSW backlog instead of just sending endless ITAs and approvals to CEC. If they pick up the backlog, then april 2022 sounds good for FSW. If they don’t and they continue with CEC, no one can tell. It’s not like IRCC is transparent in any way about what they are going to do with pending FSWs from as early as 2019
The avg processing time for FSW was 9 months and for PNP it was 8 months in 2019. So it was still slow in 2019.Almost 36% more then in 2019 when every application went smoothly and within their time frame.
Understand that the reason for this '36% more' you're referencing is purely because of their focus on CEC. The bottleneck in 2019 was the fact that they also processed FSW. They have even said so. CEC applications are easier to process, have an instantaneous 'landing' procedure, and they have a near endless supply of international students graduating every year. There is no conceivable reason for FSW to return. They can fulfil their "high skill" quota with CECs, and address any shortages with PNP.Yes, I am a FSW applicant. Almost everyone here is.
In 2019 they admitted 109,600 permanent residents under Express Entry.
Right now in 2021 they are at 95,700 admitted and the average monthly admission rate is 18,000. If they continue with this rate, there will be 149,700 admitted permanent residents this year under Express Entry.
Almost 36% more then in 2019 when every application went smoothly and within their time frame.
There were different rules I believe in 2019.The avg processing time for FSW was 9 months and for PNP it was 8 months in 2019. So it was still slow in 2019.