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
- January 28,107
- February 22,111
- March 24,173
- April 23,260
- May 20,496
- June 39,094
- July 40,251
- August 42,355
A total of
239,847 Authorizations and Visas were issued in 2021.
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!