GandiBaat
VIP Member
- Dec 23, 2014
- 2,994
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- 26th September 2021
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- 26th September 2021
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Its a bit old data (2019), but here it is : http://occupations.esdc.gc.ca/sppc-cops/l.3bd.2t.1ilshtml@-eng.jsp?lid=29&fid=1&lang=enIf we are to talk about job vacancies in Canada as a whole, we really need some statistics to show exactly how many people are/will retire in different sectors, especially in key governmental positions and later determine if immigration is the answer. Short term and long term. Also, one thing I need to note Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal don't represent Canada in the job market. If there is shortage of doctors in those cities doesnt mean Canada is in short supply of doctors everywhere. If you have 10,000 doctors retiring in British Columbia and you have 7,000 new licensed every year, you are not experiencing a crisis. It might appear short term, but not long term, because the job itself will change with time, and what it took two doctors to do 5 years ago, it might take only 1 today. See where I am going ?
25 occupations having shortage effecting 11% of total needed workforce. A lot of them are in Healthcare, as expected.
So, yes, it is well known that there is a massive shortage in some very critical occupations. See where I am coming from?
I never knew that Canadian or any dream included a 1.5 acre lot . However, even that is possible. Just not near cities. There is MASSIVE amount of land in places likes New Brunswick etc.As to homes, I don't know about you, but the whole point of me immigrating is to have the Canadian dream and that includes a home with a 1.5 acre lot and possibly a park close by. Personally, I don't like and never will metropolitan areas, huge skyscrapers, thousands of people in an area of 100 square meters and so on. I am more of all inclusive cities, like Ottawa and the likes.
What I am trying to say is that, in order to give a solution, we need a through analysis of the problem, be that of immigration and housing.
Housing analysis has been done to death over a long period of time.
https://globalnews.ca/news/8133853/canada-election-housing-crisis-explained/
https://www.policynote.ca/the-roots-of-our-housing-crisis-austerity-debt-and-extreme-speculation/
Like all policies, its not the lack of analysis that is the road block.
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