Canada’s Immigration Minister Has a Message for Foreign Students: You Can’t All Stay - ‘Perhaps go home and bring those skills back to their country’

  • Trudeau government is rethinking how it gives work permits
  • ‘Perhaps go home and bring those skills back to their country’
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Students at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Photographer: Taehoon Kim/Bloomberg

By Thomas Seal
July 17, 2024 at 4:00 PM UTC

Canada is reviewing how many long-term visas it grants to foreign students, underscoring the government’s desire to slow immigration and population growth.

Federal and provincial officials have been discussing how to match labor market demand with international students, Immigration Minister Marc Miller said in a phone interview. Although Canada has for years used universities and colleges to bring in educated, working-age immigrants, study visas shouldn’t imply a guarantee of future residency or citizenship, he said.

“That should never be the promise. People should be coming here to educate themselves and perhaps go home and bring those skills back to their country,” he said. “That hasn’t always been the recent case.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has faced mounting pressure over the rising cost of living, intense competition for scarce housing and higher unemployment. Earlier this year, Canada imposed a new cap on the number of international student visas it issues — it’s projecting fewer than 300,000 new student permits this year, down from about 437,000 last year.

Now officials are scrutinizing who among that pool of students should stay once they’re done with their studies.

Canada needs to do a better job making sure jobs for international students are commensurate with the studies they’ve undertaken, Miller said. There’s a conversation about reflecting labor needs and “how we match post-graduate work permits to an increasingly contracting shortage of labor” in provinces.

“The logic for having uncapped or uncontrolled draws from abroad is no longer there.”

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Marc Miller, Canada’s immigration minister Source: Bloomberg

The number of people in Canada with those visas has grown rapidly: there were 132,000 new PGWP holders in the country in 2022, up 78% from four years earlier, according to government data.

Changes to immigration policy will need discussion among governments and business, Miller said. Trudeau’s administration is also looking hard at how a separate program that allows companies to apply to bring in temporary foreign workers has been “used and abused,” Miller said, and he has committed to reducing the proportion of temporary residents to 5% of the population, from nearly 7%.

Foreign workers in Prince Edward Island have protested in recent weeks — with some even going on hunger strikes — after the provincial government slashed the number of permanent residency nominations for sales and service.

“Canada is now being seen as less welcoming as it has been before” for students, Miller said. But the update of that, he said, is that a study visa “is less and less being seen as a cheap way to attain permanent residency or entry into Canada, and more of a qualitative proposition — which is where we want to see it go back, to its original intent.”

However, after attending a roundtable with local media in Surrey, British Columbia, which has a large population of immigrants from South Asia, Miller said he’s also concerned by signs of racism in Canada.

“We’ve built a very important consensus around immigration in Canada, but that’s being chipped away at.”

— With assistance from Randy Thanthong-Knight

Source (Archive)
 
Not expecting the impressionable teenagers whom you sold your cities to as heaven on earth, and who have spent the last 4 years of their lives living and interacting there, making almost all of their connections and socilizing in, to stay, is so stupidly blind that nobody other than a goverment agent could have come up with it
 
“We’ve built a very important consensus around immigration in Canada, but that’s being chipped away at.”
except there never was any consensus. just like here in the us, you guys had a very pro immigrant stance and anyone who didnt 100% agree was branded an evil bigot and nazi who shouldn't be allowed to speak or have a platform. it was as much a consensus as the election in north korea are a consensus.
 
LOL I think I just heard the collective suicide of 90% of the Canadian diploma mills

Schools that only really existed to allow street shitters to come to Canada as a "student" but you just pay them up front and don't do any classes. You just get a piece of paper saying your going to school studying blah blah blah so you can get a visa to give you time to find a way in through the gaps in the immigration process.

Super lucrative for a while. I heard they were charging 50K per student visa.
 
Not expecting the impressionable teenagers whom you sold your cities to as heaven on earth, and who have spent the last 4 years of their lives living and interacting there, making almost all of their connections and socilizing in, to stay, is so stupidly blind that nobody other than a goverment agent could have come up with it
You couldn't be more wrong.

It's not teenagers, it's almost always late-20s, early-30s and overwhelmingly men.

They don't spend 4 years studying, all they need is a master's degree which is as little as 1 year.

They don't make connections, the retards live 18 to a bedroom as transient bugs.
 
After the Liberals were blindsided by losing St. Paul Toronto, The Liberals are shitting themselves, and they are shitting themselves HARD.

This is going to be interesting as you are starting to see policy reversals and signs of infighting amoungst the Liberals. They have been lagging in the polls to the conservatives for six months now, and just recently Chrystia Freeland, the Finance Minister and deputy Prime Minister, had a bunch of closed door meetings with Justin, and cannot answer the press on what those meetings were about. Speculation is swirling that she may lose her position in a senior cabinet shuffle in an attempt to regain voter trust.
 
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