Showing posts with label Fraser Institute. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fraser Institute. Show all posts

Each immigrant costs Canada $450 per year: report

Description: A train of Vancouver's Skytrain (...Image via Wikipedia
By: Jon Woodward, ctvbc.ca
Date: Tuesday Jul. 26, 2011 9:49 AM PT
A team of B.C. economists has cut a conservative think-tank's estimate of the cost of immigration down to size.
Two months after the Fraser Instituteestimated that each immigrant on average costs the Canadian government $6,051 per year – a total cost of as much as $23 billion – Mohsen Javdani and Krishna Pendakur of Metropolis British Columbiatook another look at their numbers.
Using a wider sample size of immigrants, correcting calculation errors, and using data where it was available rather than estimates, the pair found a far lower annual cost of about $450 per immigrant, or about $2 billion per year.
"We find that there's a significant fiscal effect of immigration," Javdani said. "But we do not conclude that immigrants are a burden to the Canadian economy."
Javdani added Canada needs to find programs that benefit new arrivals to improve immigrants' labour market potential and performance, which would inject money into the Canadian economy.
The authors are both economists at Simon Fraser University.
Taxes vs. benefits
Both studies attempted to figure out whether immigrants fully pay for in taxes the public services that they use, like health care or education.
The Fraser Institute's study was an attempt to gauge whether our system should move to select for would-be immigrants who already have job offers, according to co-author Patrick Grady.
"Canada has to develop a much better system of assessing immigrants coming in," Grady told CTV News in a phone interview. "They can't seem to tell if a person is going to be able to find a job at a good salary or if they'll find employment at their profession and skill."
The Fraser Institute study looked at immigrants arriving after 1987 – about 4 million people – and compared them to average Canadians in the same time frame. The result was a report sharply critical of immigration.
It recommended that Canada only allow immigrants with employment lined up, and keep citizenship only if the immigrants hang onto their jobs.
The Metropolis study, which was given to CTV News before it is to be publicly released, at first set out to correct calculation errors in the Fraser Institute report, which it said were "apparently typographic in origin." Corrected calculations reduced the difference to $5,473.
Where the Fraser Institute estimated property taxes paid by immigrants – 72 per cent of the Canadian average -- the Metropolis team dug up data on immigrant households to find they actually pay about 96 per cent of the Canadian average.
"We prefer data to guesses," the report noted dryly.
The pair also widened their sample size, going back to 1970, which would capture more immigrants in their prime earning years.
"If you look at the longer term, these immigrants are going to contribute through earning higher incomes and paying higher taxes," said author Javdani.
That change reduced the estimated cost to $2,470 per immigrant, the report said.
Instead of comparing the immigrants to the average Canadian – which would include immigrants as well – the Metropolis study compared the immigrants to the Canadian-born, and found immigrants took $554 less in benefits.
They also ignored "public good" government expenditures that are less directly related to the size of the population, such as national defence – a difference of $,1692 per immigrant.
The end result was a much lower annual total cost of $450 per immigrant – about seven per cent of the Fraser Institute figure, and a very different conclusion, said Javdani.
Immigrants tend to be poorer
Javdani said the lesson is that immigrants tend to be poorer than Canadians, and that means we need programs that can help them succeed.
Kanako Heinrichs runs Queensberry Flower Company located in Granville SkyTrain Station. She said when she came from Japan in 2007 with her new Canadian husband, it was difficult to get a job.
"Most immigrants can relate to that," she said, adding that the hardest part was bouncing around through low-paying, dead-end jobs. "It's tough."
She contacted immigrant services agency SUCCESS, and they helped her develop an idea of bringing a Tokyo-style flower shop into a subway station. The project has been a huge success, to the point that she is opening another shop in the Yaletown subway station, which will employ more people.
"Everybody has a different background. In my case, I brought what I know very well over here," she said. "That's what immigrants can do. Brand new ideas, brand new products, new concepts that make the city more exciting."
Javdani said her story is a good example of how difficult it is to filter immigrants. "If you limit settlement in Canada to the people who have a job offer, you limit opportunities that immigration may bring," he said.
SUCCESS CEO Thomas Tam said the $450 per immigrant is an investment that pays off in the connections that immigrants make with the world, and the ideas and opportunities they bring Canada.
"We see thousands of immigrants, they settle down, they find a job, some create jobs for other people," he said.
Grady of the Fraser Institute said the institute stands by its report, with some corrections that he said don't dramatically change the final cost.
He rejected the Metropolis team's choice to go farther back than 1987, because immigrants from before that time largely came from developed countries. Since then, a court decision has required the government to accept applications from all over the world.
"Canadian taxpayers are going to be subsidizing future generations of immigrants if they keep coming at the rate they're coming. It's going to exacerbate the problems that we're going to get with respect to the aging of the population, and it's not going to solve the problem," Grady said.
 

How is Canada Going to Handle the Debt from Baby Boomers in 2020?

The Strathcona Music Building, formerly Royal ...Image via Wikipedia“William Robson, CEO and president of the C.D. Howe Institute, reports that Canada will have a liability of $1.5 trillion over the next five decades”
By Pawan Shamdasani, Staff Writer



Canada is recognized for being one of the world’s most indebted countries today by the Fraser Institute. In the past decade, Canada’s national debt reached more than 70% of GDP, but since then successive finance ministers have managed to reduce it down through continued surpluses. However, as thousands of baby boomers approach the retirement line, this will fundamentally change the Canadian labour market and lead to a soaring federal budget deficit.
Since the 1950s, there has been a steady decline in Canada’s birth rate.  Also, there are not enough immigrants arriving. “So the “providing ratio” — that is, the number of working-aged Canadians relative to those over 65 — will fall,” states Matthew McClearn, of Canadian Business magazine. Currently the ratio is 5:1, but experts expect it to decrease to half by 2040.
This will result in an erosion of the tax base as more retirees outnumber the young people who intend to replace them in the workforce. By the next decade, the number of retirees relative to those in the workforce will grow by 7%.
Government spending will rise as the graying population indulge themselves on pensions, health care benefits and old-age benefits, resulting in a fiscal squeeze for Ottawa and the provinces. At the moment, health, education and elderly and child benefits account for 15% of GDP. However, by 2056, these expenses will shoot up to more than 19%.
This represents almost $68 billion in additional government spending each year, which Canada is not prepared to absorb. William Robson, CEO and president of the C.D. Howe Institute, reports that Canada will have a liability of $1.5 trillion over the next five decades.
A combination of fiscal and non-fiscal measures will be necessary to tighten the demographic squeeze alongside policies to enhance labour productivity and make up for the declining workforce. Canada will also require more budgetary discipline which has enabled it to reduce its debt over the past 10 years.
A careful examination of the rising social costs for healthcare and public pensions will be likely as well. But it is clear that many young Canadians will have to work longer before retiring and pay higher taxes than previous generations.
“Permanent fiscal actions – either through increased taxes or reduced program spending, or some combination of both, will be needed to avoid ever-increasing government deficits,” says Kevin Page, parliamentary budget officer. He warns that if corrective measures are not implemented quickly, the problem will grow “exponentially.” If imposed after 10 years, the solution could cost about $30 billion in spending cuts or tax hikes.
These demographic pressures will possibly lead to a grim financial future. At the end of 2008, Canada’s federal debt was about $458 billion. However, Dale Orr, an independent forecaster, anticipates $150 billion in additional government debt until 2014-15 due to the financial crisis. He believes that the financial burden will not be as harsh as in the 1990s.
Christopher Ragan, an economics professor at McGill University, expects the demographic squeeze to be felt largely between 2020 and 2040. He claims that we could be left in a vulnerable situation of rising interest rates and dwindling money supplies that instead could be contributed towards social spending. In other words, Canada would be subject to debt levels similar to the mid-1990s.
The government and politicians need to think long term and realize the risks of changing demographics if we are to save Canada from diving into an era of increasing deficits.
By Pawan Shamdasani, Staff Writer

Opinion: The big picture shows immigrants are a good bet

Calgary is the largest metropolis in the Calga...Image via WikipediaBy Stephen Hume, Vancouver Sun


I’m an immigrant.
Let’s get that out of the way first in this reaction to the Fraser Institute’s disingenuous study asserting that immigration costs Canada as much as $23.6 billion a year.
Researchers Herb Grubel and Patrick Grady — both of whom are also immigrants and presumably don’t consider themselves a burden on the economy — conclude that in 2006, immigrants received on average $6,051 more in benefits than they paid in taxes.
On the basis of this snapshot, they advocate restrictions upon immigration. However, the narrowness of the data set suggests the broad conclusions don’t have sound foundations.
Indeed, the arguments sound suspiciously like those of the old Reform Party, which gave gloomy voice to utilitarian assumptions about acceptable skill sets and wealth required of prospective immigrants.
Of course, anxiety about the potential financial burden of newcomers is well established, if misplaced, in framing immigration policy for Canada.
Similar concerns were expressed about Irish immigrants in the mid-19th century. Central Europeans, Russian Jews, Scandinavians — even the English — have all been subjected to worries that they got more from their new country than they contributed.
So, here we are in 2011 faced with two successful immigrants, both indisputably valued and productive members of Canadian society — let’s leave aside the amusing irony of the Fraser Institute issuing tax-deductible receipts to wealthy contributors so they can pay less tax — fretting that new immigrants don’t pay enough tax to cover their cost to Canadian society.
This sounds like the venerable “I’m in the lifeboat, pull up the ladder” argument.
I say venerable because the notion that the most recent arrivals are paying insufficient tax and drawing excessive benefits remains one of the persistent memes in Canadian society.
And it is almost always based on selective statistical evidence while ignoring the unassailable fact that of the 34 million people in Canada, 33 million are either immigrants or the descendants of immigrants who helped to build a national economy which ranks in the top eight globally.
I’m not alone in my doubtful reaction to the Fraser Institute’s study.
Robert Vineberg, a senior fellow at the Calgary-based Canada West Foundation, notes that the average income of immigrants in Canada more than 15 years before the 2006 census was actually higher than for native-born Canadians.
On average, those immigrants paid more in taxes than they got in benefits, Vineberg observes.
“This turns the Fraser Institute’s analysis on its head and suggests that immigrants are net contributors to government revenues if their entire working life is considered,” he says. The data used can lead to diametrically opposed conclusions, he notes, and suggests “the whole principle of such analysis is faulty.”
Vineberg argues that immigrant contributions are much broader than their tax contribution. For example, an immigrant nanny earning less than average income often enables both native-born parents to earn higher salaries and therefore to pay higher taxes.
So it all depends where you take your snapshot.
When my father brought me to Canada as an infant 63 years ago, the only job he could find was on a garbage scow, although he was a qualified machinist. He worked filling paint cans and delivering bread at considerably less than the average income. He had five kids in school. That snapshot would show him – and me – as a social cost rather than a benefit.
Later he became an award-winning journalist, still writing at 87. And those five kids – two are newspaper columnists, one works for the navy, another provides research and management consulting to big health care organizations, one is a successful artist. By that snapshot, he’s a benefit rather than a social cost.
Vineberg concludes: “By zooming in on one small part of a complex phenomenon, the Fraser Institute ... has come to conclusions that may appear correct but, if the assumptions involved are examined closely, are unfounded. This does not make a constructive contribution to the needed debate.”
Indeed.
shume@islandnet.com


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