Immigrants face crisis of the withering Canadian dream

As Canadians, we often talk with pride about how welcoming we are to new immigrants. Unfortunately, that’s not the impression many newcomers have of Canada.

A recent survey tells a concerning story. A striking 72 per cent of immigrants surveyed said, “Canadians don’t understand the challenges immigrants face.” Thirty per cent of young new Canadians, aged 18-34, and nearly a quarter of university-educated newcomers, say they are likely to leave Canada in the next two years.

Why are newcomers feeling alienated? According to the survey’s findings, they perceive the Canadian job market as exclusionary and the costs of living and of home ownership as prohibitive. They aren’t wrong.

Canada’s Consumer Price Index (CPI), which represents changes in prices as experienced by Canadian consumers, increased 6.7 per cent since March 2021. Meanwhile, the immigrant wage gap continues to worsen with newcomers earning about 10 per cent less than those born in Canada. That gap was less than four per cent 30 years ago. For skilled, university-educated immigrants, in their prime working years, that gap is closer to 20 per cent.

Imagine you are a nurse who emigrated recently from Nigeria. Your nursing and language skills earned you the points to immigrate to Canada and you arrive ready to work. But your nursing credentials are not recognized here and it’s a long and expensive process to get licenced in Canada. It will cost tens of thousands of dollars and take between two and five years to regain your professional status — despite the acute shortage of nurses in Canada.

Low-skilled, low-pay jobs are the only ones available and because you lack a Canadian credit history, no bank will lend you funds to restart your career. Suddenly, upward mobility seems impossible.

Approximately 12 per cent of immigrants get stuck in chronic poverty and nearly one-third experience shelter poverty, crushed by rising housing costs. It’s easy to understand why many might consider leaving for a country that would make professional integration and social mobility easier.

It doesn’t have to be this way. Skilled immigrants and refugees who arrive here with big dreams don’t have to become a generation of new Canadians who decide the promise this country offers is false.

We can — and must — reduce the unnecessary hurdles to professional integration that seem so unfair and discriminatory to those who face them. If we don’t, an immigrant brain drain will become a reality we can’t afford.

A recent report placed Canada last out of 21 OECD countries in GDP growth; two exacerbating effects will be that our status as a desirable destination for immigrants will fall and newcomers languishing professionally in Canada will be even more likely to leave.

Fortunately, not all immigrant stories end in disappointment.

Thelma is one example. A nurse from Nigeria, Thelma worked for years as a personal support worker while she navigated the relicensing process and looked for resources to help her pay for the exams. Today, she is a registered nurse in a hospital in Barrie, thanks to an affordable loan to pay for her bridge training and accreditation from Windmill Microlending.

Having achieved her professional goal, Thelma now mentors others to achieve career success in Canada.

MobSquad recruits highly skilled technology professionals from around the world and relocates them to Canada, where they consult for North American companies facing technology skill shortages. Numerous benefits accrue to Canada including increased GDP driven by greater export of services, increased tax revenue, and the economic benefit of incremental spend by new immigrants in our economy.

When new immigrants are valued and using their skills everyone benefits.

Business and charitable sector leaders and all levels of government, need to consider what more we can do together to avoid an exodus of talented immigrants. Addressing the immigrant wage gap by eliminating unnecessary wait-times and costs should be at the top of our civic agendas.

This article was originally published on The Star 


Irfhan Rawji