I remain convinced that the “answer” for Canada (maybe Australia, too) is immigration: tightly focused and controlled immigration.
As I see the available data, and I may well “see” it incorrectly, we have immigration success stories and immigration failures. Our immigrants tend to find their work at two ends of the spectrum: some are able to use their advanced education to fill the jobs for which too many Canadians are unqualified. For proof, go look at your local university – especially at the graduate schools in science and applied science. Immigrants and foreign students (many of whom will become immigrants) are disproportionately highly represented – especially immigrants from Asia. Now stay a bit late at the office and watch the cleaning crew. They too are mostly immigrants but they are from Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. Some have more than one degree but “we” are unsure that a doctor trained in Chittagong Medical College or an engineer who graduated from the Yemeni University of Science and Technology is quite “up to snuff.” So they work at the dirty, hard, low paying jobs most other Canadians do not want.
As long as we have employment above about 3% we do not need to import workers for low paying, low skill, unattractive jobs – there is (when unemployment is at
8.6%) no shortage of Canadians who
should be willing to take those jobs.
But, as long as our elementary and high schools will not teach enough young people what they need to know/do in order to complete six to ten years of scientific/technical post secondary education then we do have to import the people we need to provide our heath care, do our R&D, design our bridges and satellites, programme our computers and so on.
We need a whole lot fewer of the people who lack the skills and knowledge to do the jobs for which we have too few qualified Canadians; conversely, we need a whole lot more of those who can fill those jobs. Put simply: we need more and more Asians – East Asians (mostly Chinese) and South Asians (mostly Indians). Conversely: we need fewer and fewer Africans, Latin Americans, Middle Easterners, West Asians, Caribbean peoples, and so on. Most Europeans and Americans, who come in numbers too small to mention, remain welcome.
We need to do a couple of things:
First, and
most importantly – separate immigration and refugee policy and operations from each other. They are not even remotely related, one to another, except that people come to Canada. Immigrants are not refugees and refugees are not immigrants and mixing them, even allowing low level bureaucrats to deal with both together, is poor policy and bad administration.
Second – use the
Notwithstanding clause to deny newcomers Charter protection just because their feet touch Canadian soil. We need to follow Australia’s example. No one “enters” Canada until an immigration or refugee officer decrees, in writing, that one is “landed.” Those who cannot be “landed” can, then, be returned, forthwith, to their point of origin. The business of “landing” anyone, immigrant or refugee, is serious and must be taken seriously by politicians and civil servants.
Third – establish a sane refugee policy. Refugees, by and large, do not want to be immigrants. Some do, but they need to be moved to a different line.
We have a human
duty to provide refuge to those in danger; that refuge need not be, and generally should not be in Canada. Canada should operate and maintain refuge camps near, but not in, dangerous places around the world so that those in need may find a safe haven from which, soon rather than later, we hope, they may be able to return to their own homes.
Part of our refugee policy should involve removing the danger that creates refugees in the first place. Often that will require a robust military capability.
Fourth – find and recruit the immigrants we want rather than just waiting at the counter to see who shows up. Open new immigration offices in India and China – that need not be as expensive as it seems if every single immigration office in Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, West Asia and the Caribbean is closed and those in Europe are cut in half. That doesn’t mean people from regions outside East and South Asia cannot immigrate – it will just take longer to get the paperwork done. Canadian immigration agents should be out visiting universities in China and India looking for the young, smart people we want to come here and help us build our country. They, and their spouses, should be offered quick approvals and, even, assisted passage. We should not cancel the family reunification programme – by which parents and aunts and nieces and nephews come to Canada - but we should make the whole process slightly slower and more difficult.