
This unironically speaks volumes about the state of the labour market.
The other is that, in part, "new jobs" is occurring due, in part, to boomers retiring. At the start of the pandemic, a lot of boomers who could retire, did. You have cases where airlines forced people out of employment or offered incentives for early retirement (to try and cut costs to reflect demand at the time, causing another crisis when demand rose again later), you have cases where boomers who were planning on saving up more or working longer retired because "fuck it, Ill be out of work for a year or so during this pandemic anyways", and you have cases where boomers retired from white collar jobs, only to become consultants, take lower paying jobs with more flexibility, etc.
I know in the project management/BA side of things, there are tons of jobs to be filled from older project managers retiring, because there just aren't people experienced enough to replace them.
Now, here's the problem with the majority of these new jobs. They tend to be filled by migrant workers (ergo, are usually shit ones, in call centers, where you are not technically employed, but instead on contract, seasonally, where you get burnt out and theyre designed to burn you out, where you have to have 24/hour open availability, the "McJob", etc).
They may be higher level jobs that boomers once filled (project management, QA analyst management, different bureaucratic positions, etc), and these jobs have another type of immigrant that usually fills them;
or they tend to be jobs in the gig labour economy.
This means that a plethora of people, are still shit out of luck. New jobs are either new McJobs, gig jobs, or higher level corporate jobs- there's little to nothing inbetween that offers a decent wage. All, or nothing is the current mantra of the system.
Now, more places are willing to train in a
desperate attempt to fill in that white collar labour shortage, but theyre also equally, if not more so, willing to simply
import the labour rather than train. Some people may get ahead and wind up in an analyst position in some cushy firm, but its still stark because, even with "jobs" there is still a major skills gap, and the majority of Canadians just aren't ready for an information economy, and because millennials have been locked out of the market for so long due to boomers holding on to their positions for dear life, that skills gap in replacing the retirees is just so stark that it actually causes major problems and we're seeing that now.
Take note of the extreme delays at our airports and passport offices, our behemoth of a federal government has been slow to act.
Here's where I blame the federal government entirely, not for causing the problem of boomers retiring during the pandemic (though shutting us down certainly didnt help), but failing to anticipate the problems and actually do anything. They effectively just shoved a ton of money into airlines hands to "keep them afloat and fix the problem" and neither actually worked. Would have been better if there were some stipulations of "use some of this money to retrain Canadians".
Let alone, in other sectors of the economy, that would have been
very helpful. Instead, we will simply import this labour, as opposed to training it domestically, when we can't find someone to manage the bureaucracy.
On Canadians never addressing their flaws? Absolutely. I was black pilled years ago, and its why I left the country.
In part, I unironically think that Canada is going to realize that it has a brain drain problem over the next few years - decades. Doctors moving south due to burnout, techies moving abroad due to better opportunities, higher wages, less "cucked" populace, etc. The fed has largely destroyed or let the communities I grew up in get destroyed. Theyve actively suppressed any real sense of nationalism we have, and instead want to rely on breeding a sense of division with the US to prevent people from moving there. Honestly though, if push comes to shove (as with the Fed's response to the Truckers, who kept the economy running), other than my own local communities, friends, and family- why should I give much of a fuck about propping up the Canadian state? Theyre in it for themselves, and sadly, I do think that a lot of people are coming to the realization that not only will the state not necessarily have your back, they will sell you out, with a smile, while accusing you of bigotry for not allowing your 12 year old son to cut off his dick.
And I get it, stick around to help your local community, not everyone can move out, etc, but its like: Some of the things that prevent brain drain are, a) decent quality of life, b) higher wages than the competitor, c) a sense of patriotism or loyalty to your community;
but on those three things, we're really lacking right now, and I don't think that the state seems to realize that importing labour to solve all of Canada's problems, calling random people bigots for whatever flavour of the week thing is going on, or that due to the way our economy is being (mis)managed, the dollar is doing worse and worse, that they will have problems with people who can afford to just leaving in the future.
House pricing alone in the states or Europe is basic reason enough.