
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Canada is just one of a number of countries with an ageing population and shrinking workforce. The second largest in the world in terms of land mass, and with a population of just 36 million, Canada has announced a plan to invite 1.5 million people to migrate there over the next three years. The ambitious target is not without challenge politically, the most prominent is the housing crisis currently being felt in the country.
Canada is not alone in needing more people of working age to bolster its economy, developed nations all around the globe are finding themselves in a similar situation and struggling to find answers. Despite this need, many countries remain reluctant to embrace the notion of inviting larger numbers of immigrants in for a whole host of reasons, from a lack of space to negative media portrayals of migrants. None-the-less, gaps in their skilled trades’ sectors demand resolution, and increased immigration can offer it.
Whilst increased migration can help a country like Canada overcome the challenges of a diminishing labour force, it also has the effect of denying a migrant’s home country of expertise. Not only can this have the effect of denying a country their brightest and best, it also comes with a financial cost too, with countries training more than they need in anticipation of losing a high percentage of those workers.
So this week on the Inquiry we're asking, should other countries adopt Canada's immigration model?
By BBC World Service4.6
695695 ratings
Canada is just one of a number of countries with an ageing population and shrinking workforce. The second largest in the world in terms of land mass, and with a population of just 36 million, Canada has announced a plan to invite 1.5 million people to migrate there over the next three years. The ambitious target is not without challenge politically, the most prominent is the housing crisis currently being felt in the country.
Canada is not alone in needing more people of working age to bolster its economy, developed nations all around the globe are finding themselves in a similar situation and struggling to find answers. Despite this need, many countries remain reluctant to embrace the notion of inviting larger numbers of immigrants in for a whole host of reasons, from a lack of space to negative media portrayals of migrants. None-the-less, gaps in their skilled trades’ sectors demand resolution, and increased immigration can offer it.
Whilst increased migration can help a country like Canada overcome the challenges of a diminishing labour force, it also has the effect of denying a migrant’s home country of expertise. Not only can this have the effect of denying a country their brightest and best, it also comes with a financial cost too, with countries training more than they need in anticipation of losing a high percentage of those workers.
So this week on the Inquiry we're asking, should other countries adopt Canada's immigration model?

7,639 Listeners

375 Listeners

519 Listeners

876 Listeners

1,046 Listeners

293 Listeners

5,520 Listeners

1,799 Listeners

964 Listeners

584 Listeners

2,110 Listeners

358 Listeners

965 Listeners

407 Listeners

410 Listeners

217 Listeners

849 Listeners

366 Listeners

58 Listeners

476 Listeners

238 Listeners

360 Listeners

233 Listeners

307 Listeners

3,177 Listeners

65 Listeners

814 Listeners

555 Listeners

643 Listeners

386 Listeners

239 Listeners

56 Listeners

75 Listeners

74 Listeners