Strong Immigration Helps Canada Meet Labour Needs

Author: 
Source: http://designbuildsource.ca/2013/03/strong-immigration-helps-canada-meet-labour-needs/


As huge oil and resource construction projects continue to soak up labour, immigrants continue to pour into Canada as the nation recorded its highest sustained level of immigration on record for the seventh consecutive year last year.
Last month, Citizenship and Immigration Canada announced the nation had welcomed 257,515 permanent residents in 2012, well within the government’s target of 240,000 to 265,000 new Canadians for the year.
Each year since 2006, the nation has admitted an average of around a quarter of a million immigrants, with the country averaging around 30,250 more admissions per year in the seven-year period from 2006 to 2012 than in the previous decade (1996 until 2005.)
Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism Minister Jason Kenney said Canada’s immigration rates are among the highest of any country.
Migrant Construction Worker
“Canada has been welcoming not only the highest sustained level of immigrants in Canadian history, we also have, on a per-capita basis, among the highest immigration rates in the world,” Kenney said, adding that the government is moving toward a more effective immigration system. “Immigration is a key part of the government’s plan to grow our economy, spur job creation, and ensure long-term prosperity for all Canadians.”
In many sectors in the nation’s economy, immigration has been highlighted as one of the strategies needed to ease help ease domestic labour shortages in construction, engineering and other areas. These shortages are typically caused by the retirements of those in the baby boomer generation and the mass volume of resource development projects on the horizon.
Shortages are particularly acute in construction, where the Construction Sector Council says the industry will need an extra 319,000 workers by 2020 – 100,000 to meet increased demand and 219,000 to replace those expected to retire.
Furthermore, in the resource industry alone, a report from the Conference Board of Canada predicts investment in oil sands alone will create demand for 880,000 person years of construction labour over the next 25 years.
By Andrew Heaton

Enhanced by Zemanta

Canada employers to keep adding jobs in 2nd qtr -Manpower

Percent of workers using public transit to get...
Percent of workers using public transit to get to work in 2006 - selected metropolitan areas in Canada and the U.S. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

TORONTO, March 12 | Tue Mar 12, 2013 12:00am EDT
(Reuters) - Canadian employers are likely to keep adding jobs in the second quarter but at a slightly slower pace than in the first quarter, with the highest growth in the transportation and utilities sectors, according to a survey released on Tuesday.
A net 12 percent of Canadian employers expect to add jobs in the second quarter, the study from staffing company Manpower showed. That was down slightly from a net 13 percent three months earlier.
The survey measures the difference between employers who say they will add jobs and those planning to cut positions.
Five percent of employers surveyed about the second quarter plan cutbacks, the survey of 1,900 Canadian employers revealed. Some 75 percent of employers expect to maintain their current staffing levels, and some were unsure.
In the transportation and utilities sectors, a net 22 percent of employers expected to add jobs, a 6 percentage point increase from a year earlier.
Jobs growth overall is expected to be tempered by weakness in the mining and energy sectors, which have been hit by volatile commodity prices.
The net employment outlook for the resources sector remained at 8 percent, steady from the previous quarter but a decrease of 13 percentage points from a year earlier, according to the study.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Leave us a message

Check our online courses now

Check our online courses now
Click Here now!!!!

Subscribe to our newsletter

Vcita