“We planned the destruction of societal infrastructure because its much cheaper to import people. A lack of infrastructure is the point, immigrants leaving is a problem.”
nazerall on
This the entire article:
“One in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years of arriving, according to a recent report by the Institute for Canadian Citizenship. High-skilled immigrants leave at twice the rate of low-skilled workers within the first five years.”
CompEng_101 on
“One in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years of arriving…”
Is this more or less than before?
“High-skilled immigrants leave at twice the rate of low-skilled workers within the first five years.”
What rate is that? Is this a lot?
McBuck2 on
“One in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years of arriving”
Many by the time they are 25 and born here are leaving for travel, for work etc. What’s their point?
DymlingenRoede on
If someone leaves after spending up to 25 years working and paying taxes, to get old and retire somewhere else I don’t really see how that’s a big problem?
And more to the point if Canada needs X immigrants a year and Y immigrants leave per year, that just means we need an intake of X+Y immigrants annually to be at the ideal rate.
5 Comments
“We planned the destruction of societal infrastructure because its much cheaper to import people. A lack of infrastructure is the point, immigrants leaving is a problem.”
This the entire article:
“One in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years of arriving, according to a recent report by the Institute for Canadian Citizenship. High-skilled immigrants leave at twice the rate of low-skilled workers within the first five years.”
“One in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years of arriving…”
Is this more or less than before?
“High-skilled immigrants leave at twice the rate of low-skilled workers within the first five years.”
What rate is that? Is this a lot?
“One in five immigrants leaves Canada within 25 years of arriving”
Many by the time they are 25 and born here are leaving for travel, for work etc. What’s their point?
If someone leaves after spending up to 25 years working and paying taxes, to get old and retire somewhere else I don’t really see how that’s a big problem?
And more to the point if Canada needs X immigrants a year and Y immigrants leave per year, that just means we need an intake of X+Y immigrants annually to be at the ideal rate.
That doesn’t seem too bad, to be honest.