Trudeau botched immigration surge, Canada’s top bank economists say – Financial Post

Hard to make a stronger condemnation than this:

Canada’s current immigration policy — among the most open in the world — is now causing economic damage and needs to be reconsidered, according to the country’s top economists.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s decision to dramatically increase immigration — and allow a flood of temporary workers and international students — without providing proper support has created a laundry list of economic problems, including higher inflation and weak productivity, chief economists at Canada’s biggest banks said Jan. 11 during a wide-ranging panel discussion in Toronto.

“Frankly I’m surprised we screwed it up because we sit in such a privileged position in Canada,” Beata Caranci, chief economist at Toronto-Dominion Bank, told a packed audience at an Economic Club of Canada event.

Unlike many other countries, including the United States, Canada is not dealing with poorly controlled flows of migrants across its land borders and has had time to think about the implications of its policies, Caranci said. “We designed our own policy, we put it in place, we implemented it, and we still screwed it up.

Source: Trudeau botched immigration surge, Canada’s top bank economists say – Financial Post

Keller:The day DEI World entered Canadian politics

Keller has shifted from valid critiques of current immigration policies to critiques of DEI, given the blinders by some to anti-semitism, with one of the more blatant examples. Another one might be the KOJO Institute as their website does not mention anti-semitism based upon a word search:

….But today’s anti-racism training often isn’t at all like that. Which is how you end up with Laith Marouf. He worked for an organization that received federal funding to deliver anti-racism education, and whose contract was terminated after it came to light that he was posting antisemitic content online.

In Liberal World, claiming to be against racism, while discriminating on the basis of race, is not only wrong, it’s a philosophical contradiction. But DEI World’s anti-racism doesn’t work that way. It starts by putting groups of people into either the good racial box or the bad one, so that one can decide who is oppressed and oppressor, and who is entitled to what sort of treatment.

That’s how you end up with people posting things online that, in Liberal World, are clearly racist – and yet these same people, their minds in DEI World, sincerely believe themselves to be anti-racists.

Source: The day DEI World entered Canadian politics

Deputy ministers’ report on values and ethics in public service lacks ‘a point of view,’ says expert

Valid critique and yes, the need to be more pragmatic and I would argue, concrete:

….Michael Wernick, a former Clerk of the Privy Council, said that while the document was a “decent consultation ‘what we heard’ report,” it left him asking “what now?”

“It’s oddly lacking a point of view or position or a stance on anything. It kind of just sends the ball back to the Clerk and the Secretary of the Treasury Board and says we really should have policy on acceptable use of social media, but there’s no advice on what that policy should look like,” Wernick said.

“It identifies a problem with the incursions of political staff, but there’s no advice on what to do about it. So it kind of left me hanging.”

The report’s authors said the document is “intended to serve as a prologue to a broader dialogue on values and ethics in the public service, and we begin by sharing what we have heard, frankly and without filters.”

Pierre-Alain Bujold, spokesperson for the Privy Council Office, said the Clerk is taking time to reflect on the report’s observations and recommendations and consider the best options for next steps. He said the report will inform the “next phase,” including how to broaden the discussion on values and ethics.

When Hannaford created the group of senior officials tasked with discussing values and ethics within the public service, he said he expected to see a “milestone report” by the end of the year.

Wernick said he agrees with the report’s call for more engagement, adding that he’d like to see the next round “drill deeper and be more pragmatic.” He added that it will be interesting to see if Parliament shows interest in the report and if the House of Commons committee on government operations invites the Clerk to speak about it.

“This looks like a picture of how the public service sees itself,” he said. “I don’t know exactly who they talked to but it sounds like they talked to a lot of those who were involved in diversity, equity issues. The report is a bit light on things that voters and taxpayers would probably be more interested in like money, productivity, excellence.”

Daniel Quan-Watson, a deputy minister for just under 15 years before his retirement last year, said he supports the report’s recommendation for conversations to be furthered “institution-wide” within federal government departments.

“We need to keep talking about this because things are evolving quickly and in different ways and because people have a lot of questions,” Quan-Watson said, adding that conversations will differ substantially from organization to organization. “I think that this goes a long way to making sure that they do that.”

Quan-Watson said it would have been “deeply problematic” for a tool on all values and ethics in the public service to have been developed or for any major changes to be made to the Values and Ethics Code over a few months.

“That would miss 90 per cent of the public service, I’m not sure that those changes are ones that would be that effective,” Quan-Watson said, adding that he hopes public servants feel free to raise their questions and concerns to managers and senior leadership. “I think the sensible thing to say is listen, here are the areas that we looked at, we’re getting consistent themes in this, so let’s go see what the broader public service has to say about it.”

“That takes time. It makes it stronger and it makes it incredibly more valuable when it’s done.”

Source: Deputy ministers’ report on values and ethics in public service lacks ‘a point of view,’ says expert

When ‘conservatives pounce’: The right finds its cautionary tale of subtle media bias

Always find MacDougall’s comments reasonable and balanced:

“I can think of no reporters I’ve ever dealt with who had it out for a party or a worldview. Most were trying to do the job in the fairest way possible,” said Andrew MacDougall, who was director of communications for former prime minister Stephen Harper and is now a director at Trafalgar Strategy.

“But like all biases, you’re not really aware of them until somebody points them out. If you’re university-educated and urban-living, you tend to have a worldview that is different from somebody who isn’t — and it takes a lot of effort to open your eyes up,” said MacDougall….

While MacDougall agrees that conservatives generally have to work harder to get a fair shake from the media, he also warned people on the right not to get too caught up in playing the victim. He pointed to the current controversy around Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s recent free luxury holiday in Jamaica as proof that, above all, the media craves juicy stories.

And when conservatives govern, he said, there are times when the negative reporting targeting them is just proper reporting.

“The hardest thing in government to do is to distinguish between the fact that you’re getting heat for being in government versus for being the party that you are in government,” he said.

Source: When ‘conservatives pounce’: The right finds its cautionary tale of subtle media bias

Canadian Immigration Tracker – November 2023 update

No major changes from October.

The one element to flag is the sharp increase in the number of asylum claimants, from a monthly average of about 10,000 January to June 2023 to about 15,000 July to November, largely driven by the easing of visa restrictions, with close to two-thirds of claims being “inland.” Given the large number of Mexican claimants, averaging more than 2,000 per month in 2023, there will continue to be calls to reimpose the visa requirement on Mexicans, as well as more general calls to restore the previous visa restrictions.

Highlights on slide 3.

https://www.slideshare.net/slideshows/canadian-immigration-tracker-key-slides-november-2023/265358086

Government was warned two years ago high immigration could affect housing costs

Public service providing “fearless advice” while government, as is its right, rejected it in favour of ongoing increases in permanent and temporary immigration. Advice to former immigration minister Fraser who now, ironically, and perhaps deservedly so, is now the housing minister who has to clean up this mess (not doable in substantive terms before the election).

Eerily similar to some of my earlier opinion pieces, Increasing immigration to boost population? Not so fast.:

Federal public servants warned the government two years ago that large increases to immigration could affect housing affordability and services, internal documents show.

Documents obtained by The Canadian Press through an access-to-information request show Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada analyzed the potential effects immigration would have on the economy, housing and services, as it prepared its immigration targets for 2023 to 2025.

The deputy minister, among others, was warned in 2022 that housing construction had not kept up with the pace of population growth.

“In Canada, population growth has exceeded the growth in available housing units,” one slide deck reads.

“As the federal authority charged with managing immigration, IRCC policy-makers must understand the misalignment between population growth and housing supply, and how permanent and temporary immigration shapes population growth.”

Immigration accounts for nearly all population growth in Canada, given the country’s aging demographics.

The federal government ultimately decided to increase the number of permanent residents Canada welcomes each year to 500,000 in 2025, a decision that drew considerable attention and scrutiny. It means in 2025, Canada will welcome nearly twice as many permanent residents as it did in 2015.

The document reveals federal public servants were well aware of the pressures high population growth would have on housing and services.

“Rapid increases put pressure on health care and affordable housing,” public servants warned. “Settlement and resettlement service providers are expressing short-term strain due to labour market conditions, increased levels and the Afghanistan and Ukraine initiatives.”

Housing affordability has now become a political liability for the Liberal government. The Conservatives have gained considerable momentum over the last year as the party pounces on affordability issues, while avoiding the issue of immigration in particular. These pressures have forced the Liberal government to refocus its efforts on housing policy and begin to address the spike in international students with new rules.

Recent data shows Canada’s pace of population growth continues to set records as the country brings in a historic number of temporary residents as well, largely through international student and temporary foreign worker programs.

The country’s population grew by more than 430,000 during the third quarter of 2023, marking the fastest pace of population growth in any quarter since 1957.

Experts spanning from Bay Street to academic institutions have warned that Canada’s strong population growth is eroding housing affordability, as demand outpaces supply.

The Bank of Canada has offered similar analysis. Deputy governor Toni Gravelle delivered a speech in December warning that strong population growth is pushing rents and home prices upward.

Public opinion polls also show Canadians are increasingly concerned about the pressure immigration is putting on services, infrastructure and housing, leading to waning support for high immigration.

The Liberal government has defended its immigration policy decisions, arguing that immigrants help bring about economic prosperity and help with the country’s demographics as the population ages.

However, amid the heightened scrutiny of the Liberal government’s immigration policy, Immigration Minister Marc Miller levelled out the annual target at 500,000 permanent residents for 2026.

The documents from 2022 note that Canada’s immigration targets have exceeded the recommendations of some experts, including the Century Initiative, an organization that advocates for growing the country’s population to 100 million by the end of the century.

However, attention is now shifting from these targets to the steep rise in non-permanent residents. Between July and October, about three-quarters of Canada’s population growth came from temporary residents, including international students and temporary foreign workers.

That trend is raising alarms about the increase in businesses’ reliance on low-wage migrant workers and the luring of international student byshady post-secondary institutions.

Mikal Skuterud, an economics professor at the University of Waterloo who specializes in immigration policy, says the federal government appears to have “lost control” of temporary migration flows.

Unlike the annual targets for permanent residents, the number of temporary residents is dictated by demand for migrant workers and international students.

He also notes there is a link between the targets for permanent residents and the flow of temporary residents.

“To the extent that you increase permanent numbers, and migrants realize the way you get a PR is to come here as a temporary resident … then migrants are incentivized to kind of come and try their luck,” he said.

Skuterud, who has been a vocal critic of the federal government’s immigration policy, says the benefits of high immigration have been exaggerated by the Liberals.

He said that starting around 2015, when the Liberal government was first elected, a narrative developed in Canada that “immigration was kind of a solution to Canada’s economic growth problems.”

And while the professor says that narrative is one that people like to believe, he notes higher immigration does little when it comes to increasing living standards, as measured by real GDP per capita.

Public servants at IRCC are in agreement, the released documents suggest.

“Increasing the working age population can have a positive impact on gross domestic product, but little effect on GDP per capita,” public servants noted.

Source: Government was warned two years ago high immigration could affect housing costs – Moose Jaw Today

Gurski: Canada’s open-door immigration policy shouldn’t mean anything goes

Valid note of caution. Encouragingly, Minister Miller was frank about this concern and the need for rigorous security checks as well as the difference between Ukraine and Gaza:

More to the point, the ongoing war in Gaza has spurred the Liberal government to announce special measures to help the family members of Canadians get out of the war zone. In theory, this is a bold and welcome move but does have a security nexus. Hamas is the ruling party in the area — and is a listed terrorist entity in Canada. Support for it in the wake of Israeli military action after the Oct. 7 terrorist attack in southern Israel is on the rise, in the region, worldwide and possibly in Canada. It is possible and perhaps even probable that Hamas members or supporters will attempt to join the queue. They cannot be allowed to succeed (I am sure CSIS is well aware of the likelihood). Imagine a scenario where a recent arrival carried out an attack in the name of Hamas on Canadian soil: I would prefer not to have to go there.

We do not want to become a nation where the anti-immigrant lobby gains influence and status. We see what is happening in Europe (for instance, the political party led by far-right, anti-Islam politician Geert Wilders recently won the most seats in the Netherlands) and it ain’t pretty. One way to avoid that eventuality is to allow our security agencies to do their job, then take their advice to heart. The consequences of not doing so are dire indeed.

Phil Gurski is President/CEO of Borealis Threat and Risk Consulting, and a firmer CSIS employee. http://www.borealisthreatandrisk.com

Source: Gurski: Canada’s open-door immigration policy shouldn’t mean anything goes

International students angered by failing grade say they feel exploited. Now the university is giving them a second chance

Emblemic of the failures of provincial higher education policies, institutional avarice and lack of federal guardrails for such abuse:

Failing marks for dozens of international students have led to a days-long sit-in at an Ontario university, with some frustrated students saying they’ve been left feeling as though the school is trying to milk them for more money.

In response to the controversy, Algoma University has re-evaluated the grades in one online course offered by its Brampton campus and, finding them “abnormally low,” has given dozens more students a passing grade. It’s also moved to offer the students a free makeup exam. 

The school says it deeply values academic integrity and fairness, and that for those students retaking the exam, it will be up to them to do the work and make the grade. It didn’t address the students’ suggestion that it was trying to extract more fees out of the affected students.

Source: International students angered by failing grade say they feel exploited. Now the university is giving them a second chance

Clark:To list Iran’s Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist group, Canada needs a better way

Agree, appropriate distinction:

….Simply designating the IRGC as a terrorist organization would mean any non-citizen draftee in the IRGC would be barred from Canada – visitors, students, immigrants – with only narrow grounds to appeal.

The IRGC is big, counting roughly 150,000 troops, according to University of Ottawa professor Thomas Juneau. That means there have been a lot of conscripts. They don’t have a choice of whether they are sent to the army, the police or the Revolutionary Guards. Mahmoud Azimaee, a statistician and former conscript who was declared inadmissible to the U.S. last year, believes there are probably 10,000 Canadians who are former IRGC conscripts.

Any new regulation or law must include a well-crafted carve-out for those people.

The U.S. Trump administration didn’t do that in 2019, and it was a mistake. But the Biden administration hasn’t touched it out of fear of being labelled soft on Iran.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told a Congressional committee in 2022 that listing Iran as a terrorist organization didn’t add much in practice, except barring more people from entering the U.S. – chiefly conscripts. “The people who are the real bad guys have no intention of travelling here, anyway,” he said.

Source: To list Iran’s Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist group, Canada needs a better way

Nicolas: «Représenter»

Hard to disagree with overall arguments in favour of diverse representation and lived experiences. However, there is a risk in conflating the simpler diversity of appearance and identity with the more complex diversity of perspectives and thought. Governments and organizations have a tendency to choose representatives for such bodies from organizations and individuals generally in agreement with their preferred policy directions, a recent example being the federal Employment Equity Act Review Task Force:

En décembre dernier, le gouvernement du Québec a annoncé la composition de son comité de sages sur l’identité de genre, lequel n’avait jamais été réclamé ni par les regroupements ni par les experts québécois liés à l’identité de genre. Parmi les trois personnes choisies, aucune n’est trans ou non binaire

Dès l’annonce, des voix se sont élevées dans les communautés LGBTQ+ pour dénoncer l’initiative caquiste. Du bout des lèvres, la ministre de la Famille, Suzanne Roy, a fini par admettre qu’une personne trans ou non binaire aurait pu avoir un rôle de « représentation » sur le comité, mais que le gouvernement avait « décidé de faire autrement ». 

Je pense qu’il y a dans ce fiasco une occasion de se pencher davantage sur cette notion de « représentation », qui a pris de plus en plus de place dans notre compréhension de l’équité et de l’inclusion sociale dans la dernière décennie. 

Depuis décembre, plusieurs ont déjà fait le parallèle avec la question des femmes. Oserait-on aujourd’hui créer un comité de sages sur la condition féminine — ou même sur l’avortement, plus précisément — sans qu’il y ait de femmes autour de la table ? Bien sûr que non. Mais pourquoi ?

Non seulement parce que les femmes doivent être « représentées » lorsqu’on discute de ce qui les concerne. Mais aussi parce que les femmes disposent d’une expérience de vie qui, lorsqu’elle se conjugue à une quête de savoir et de compréhension de ce vécu, aboutit à une expertise de la condition féminine difficilement égalable. Parce que la médecine a été développée par et pour les hommes, un ensemble de savoirs sur leur propre corps dont les femmes disposaient a longtemps été dévalorisé par la science occidentale. Et encore aujourd’hui, la sous-représentation des femmes dans les sciences à l’université joue un rôle dans les priorités qui sont établies en recherche médicale. Plusieurs aspects de la santé reproductive sont sous-étudiés parce que les gens qui gèrent les fonds dans ces domaines ne sont pas à l’image de la population. 

Il ne s’agit pas ici, donc, de simple « représentation ». Mais d’une perspective intégrant un vécu, ainsi que d’une expertise développée par une soif de connaissance quasi obsessive, qu’il est rare de développer à un tel niveau à moins que ce savoir ne soit lié à notre récit de vie.

Il y a aussi un souci du détail, un perfectionnisme, voire une absence de « droit à l’erreur » qui s’installent lorsqu’on sait que presque aucune personne qui nous ressemble n’a accès au lieu de pouvoir auquel on accède. Lorsqu’on sait qu’une bourde pourrait avoir une incidence sur toute une communauté déjà marginalisée et fragilisée socialement, mais qui nous est chère et avec laquelle on partage une partie de notre quotidien et de nos relations les plus intimes, on développe un sens éthique particulier dans notre rapport au travail. 

Si le comité de sages sur l’identité de genre adopte des recommandations qui font du mal, au bout du compte, aux jeunes trans et non binaires du Québec, ses membres auront-ils, de la manière dont leurs cercles sociaux sont établis, à regarder ces jeunes dans les yeux, dans leur vie personnelle, une fois leur mandat public terminé ? Ou pourront-ils se soustraire aux conséquences de leurs actes en éteignant leur télévision et en refermant leurs journaux ?

Ce ne sont là que quelques aspects de cette notion de « représentation » rarement explicités dans nos débats sociaux sur la « diversité » dans les lieux de pouvoir. La superficialité avec laquelle la question est comprise mène à des bourdes dont les conséquences ne sont justement pas vécues par les gens qui les commettent. 

Lorsque le comité a été annoncé, la ministre de la Condition féminine, Martine Biron, a quant à elle vu dans la composition un groupe qui sera « capable de s’élever un peu ». Il y a dans cette perspective une croyance populaire à laquelle il est aussi opportun de s’attarder. 

Si les minorités d’une société (ou les personnes que l’on a minorisées dans les lieux de pouvoir, comme les femmes) sont souvent perçues comme des « représentantes » des groupes auxquels elles appartiennent, les individus issus des groupes majoritaires, eux, seraient « neutres », au-dessus de la mêlée, objectifs, mieux capables d’indépendance intellectuelle. 

Or, ce n’est pas parce qu’un individu a moins été forcé par sa société à développer une réflexion explicite sur les groupes auxquels il appartient qu’il appartient moins à ces groupes. La majorité est un groupe. Les personnes cisgenres, dans le cas qui nous occupe, aussi. 

On le voit bien dans le discours caquiste sur les inquiétudes de « la population » relatives aux questions de genre. Le sous-texte de toutes les déclarations du parti, c’est que « la population », « les parents inquiets » et « le monde ordinaire » n’incluent pas les personnes trans et non binaires. 

Peu importe ce que pensent les trois personnes qui ont été nommées au comité, il faut comprendre que la Coalition avenir Québec les y a placées dans l’espoir d’en faire des « représentants » de cette « population » comprise comme excluant les minorités de genre. Il n’y a donc pas de « représentation » pour ces minorités  et de « neutralité » pour les « sages ». Mais bien un choix politique de ne représenter que la perspective majoritaire dans un comité chargé de se pencher sur les minorités de genre. 

Car l’expérience de vie et le vécu ne font pas qu’influer sur l’expertise développée par les personnes issues de groupes minoritaires : tous les humains sont constitués à partir de leur expérience de vie et de leur capacité plus ou moins développée à éprouver de l’empathie et de la curiosité pour les gens qui ne leur ressemblent pas.

Il n’y a pas, du côté majoritaire, l’universel et la « capacité à s’élever un peu », et, de l’autre, le « particularisme ». La société est formée par nos perspectives, nos angles morts, nos réseaux et nos intérêts, pour tous, partout, en tout temps.

Source: «Représenter»