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November 14, 2008

Peter Ladner can sing

Filed under: , , Chinatown, Vancouver, election — admin @ 7:04 pm

Surprise, surprise…. Peter Ladner indeed sings quite well :)

Just to add my friend’s David Wong’s recent creation on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/user/FansofPeterLadner



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November 12, 2008

City knows who did it

Filed under: , , Canadian politics, Chinatown, News, Vancouver, election, politics — admin @ 5:30 am

The $100m loan scandal is just getting juicier everyday!

Global TV reports tonight that city staff’s investigation into how the document was leaked (see Vancouver Sun) has made major progress. Going through surveillance tapes and entry swipe card records, the investigators now have a main suspect … who is a councillor!

Global didn’t say who the councillor was but hinted that this councillor is highly possible to return to city council after the election. So it should be someone who has a good chance of being re-elected…

Hmmm…. that’s the best scandal in years in BC.



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November 11, 2008

Forecast: BC housing market hit hardest in 2009

Filed under: , , Chinatown, News, house prices, real estate — admin @ 11:17 pm

CREA release – In line with the recent downward revisions of Canadian economic and job growth forecasts, The Canadian Real Estate Association is updating its MLS® housing market forecast for the balance of 2008, and 2009. National home sales activity is now forecast to decrease by 12% to 461,200 units in
2008, and decrease by three% in 2009. The number of new listings is forecast to decline further from the peak reached in the second quarter of 2008, with levels in 2009 on par with levels in 2007.

Fewer new listings will stabilize the resale housing market in 2009. Average home prices will reach new heights in nearly all provinces in 2008, but declining activity in higher priced markets will hold the national average price stable this year compared to 2007.

Average price is forecast to reach new heights in six of ten provinces in 2009, but lower sales activity in British Columbia will continue weighing on the national average price. The national average price is forecast to ease by 2.1% in 2009.

Canadian economic growth is forecast to start improving in the second half of 2009 before accelerating in 2010. Re-aligning housing market balance and improving home affordability will set the stage for an improving housing market in 2010.

“Canadian economic growth is being sideswiped by fi nancial market turmoil, slowing world economic growth, and weaker commodity prices,” said CREA Chief Economist Gregory Klump. “The question of whether Canada will avoid a technical recession is moot, growth will be slow enough that it will feel like a recession.”

“Consumer confi dence is being battered by downbeat headline news. Homebuyer sentiment has become very cautious, by contrast to the urgency to purchase in 2007. There are fewer buyers and they are taking longer to shop, so the pricing environment is very competitive. Unrealistically priced homes will sit on the market. Sellers are by and large under no distress to sell. Those who put their home on the market at an unrealistic price and are unwilling to cut it will likely take it off the market when the listing expires with a view to selling another day.”

“The projected decline in new MLS® listings will prevent an oversupply of homes available for sale on the Canadian housing market”, says CREA President Calvin Lindberg. “This stands in stark contrast to the U.S. housing market, which is signifi cantly oversupplied.”

“Canadians are defi nitely concerned by the economic news out of the U.S., and much of that news stems from distress in the U.S. housing market. Canadians should realize that Canada’s economy and housing market are both in better shape. This means the downturn in Canadian consumer confi dence will pass and when it does, housing demand will rebound, especially when they realize the window of opportunity to buy at reduced prices and at low interest rates will begin to narrow once economic growth shows signs of rebounding next year.”



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Taiwan passes comfort women bill

Filed under: , , Chinatown, comfort women, justice — admin @ 10:27 pm

Yes! Another one!

Taiwan Legislature ratifies comfort women resolution

Central News Agency - The Legislative Yuan yesterday adopted a resolution on comfort women, demanding an apology from the Japanese government to the women who were forced to provide sexual services to its army during World War II.

Taiwan’s legislature became the second country in Asia whose leading representative body expressed its position on comfort women, following a resolution adopted last month by South Korea’s National Assembly that urged Japan to apologize to the comfort women.

Taiwan’s resolution asked the Japanese government to “formally recognize, apologize for and accept the historical responsibility of its army’s sex-slave system during World War II with a clear attitude.”

The resolution, proposed jointly by four legislators from the ruling Kuomintang and opposition Democratic Progressive Party with the support of 23 other legislators, also requests that the Japanese government educate present and future generations on Japan’s wartime practices with accurate historical facts.

“Now that the resolution is adopted, we hope that the historical truth can be recorded accurately in history textbooks, ” said Cynthia Kao, executive director of the Taipei Women’s Rescue Foundation (TWRF).

According to the foundation, existing textbooks have only limited and vague passages on comfort women.

Taiwan OK’s bill seeking Japan “comfort women” apology

Reuters - In another sign of Taipei’s toughening stance toward Tokyo, Taiwan’s parliament on Tuesday passed a resolution asking Japan to apologise for forcing women into sex slavery during World War Two and to compensate victims.

Legislators voted unanimously on the resolution, which demands an unspecified payout for Taiwan “comfort women” who worked for the Japanese military. Japan colonised Taiwan from 1895 through World War Two.

“We still need to work hard at getting the justice and respect for these women,” said Hsu Ming-mei, office manager for legislator Yang Lee-huan, a co-sponsor of the bill. Those women, she said, “will be happy the government is willing to help them.”

“Comfort women” is a Japanese euphemism for the estimated 200,000 women forced to provide sex for Japan’s soldiers at battle-zone brothels during World War Two. About 50 Taiwan women worked in sex slavery, Hsu said, and 20 are still alive.

Japan set up the Asian Women’s Fund in the 1990s to compensate former sex slaves. It has already apologised to Taiwan, said an official in Tokyo’s de facto embassy in Taipei.

“The past is the past, and the Japanese government has given nobility and respect to these women,” the official said.

Taiwan’s ruling Nationalist Party (KMT), which also dominates parliament, has become tougher on Japan than the island’s opposition party when it ruled from 2000 to 2008.

Under the KMT, which fought Japan in World War Two when it ruled all of China, Taiwan recalled an envoy from Japan after a boat collision near a group of disputed islands in June, and this month it rebutted a Japanese air force chief of staff’s comment that Tokyo was not a World War Two aggressor.

Taiwan demands Japanese apology, compensation for comfort women

Earthtimes - Taiwan on Tuesday demanded that Japan make a formal apology and pay compensation to women who were forced to serve as prostitutes for the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II. The Taiwan parliament passed a resolution demanding Japan apologize for forcibly recruiting the women, who were euphemistically called comfort women, and pay them compensation.

“We demand that Japan assume historical responsibility for sexual slavery and apologize and make compensation directly to the victims,” parliamentary speaker Wang Jin-pying said.

“We also demand that Japan must educate this and the next generation of Japanese so that such crimes won’t happen again,” he said.

Taiwan’s former comfort women welcomed the parliamentary resolution.

“We have been waiting for many years,” Hsiu Mei, 92, said at a news conference held by the Taipei Women’s Rescue Foundation, which looks after former comfort women in Taiwan. “Now, finally, our government has made a formal demand.”

According to a foundation survey in 1992, 58 women admitted having served as comfort women in the Japanese army during World War II. Since then, 38 have died.

The topic has long been a taboo subject, and many victims kept silent out of shame.

“We hope Japan will hurry up in offering apologies and compensation to the former comfort women because if it keeps delaying, they will not live to receive them,” said Lai Tsai-er, a foundation staff member.

During World War II, Japan forced about 200,000 mostly Asian women to become prostitutes for the Japanese Imperial Army.

Japan claimed the women voluntarily provided sexual services, but surviving comfort women in China, Taiwan, South and North Korea, the Philippines, Indonesia and the Netherlands have refuted Tokyo’s claims, saying they had been forced into sexual slavery.

In 1995, Japan established a private fund to compensate the women. Some accepted compensation while others rejected it, saying it was an insult while vowing to carry on the fight for a formal apology and compensation.

None of Taiwan’s former comfort women have accepted compensation from the private fund. They live on a 15,000-Taiwan-dollar (460-US-dollar) monthly subsidy from the Taiwan government and receive free medical care.

Taiwan resolution calls on Japan to compensate comfort women

AP - Taiwan’s parliament adopted Tuesday a resolution seeking an apology and compensation from Japan for forcing women into sex slavery during World War II.

In a rare show of unity, the island’s ruling and opposition parties passed by a unanimous vote the Taiwan Comfort Women Resolution, calling on Tokyo to “accept historical responsibility for its World War II sex slavery institution, and apologize to and compensate surviving victims.”

Japan came under fire from resolutions passed last year by the United States and European Union calling on Tokyo to own up to its wartime military brothel program that allegedly forced hundreds of thousands of women to become prostitutes, euphemistically referred to as “comfort women” in Japan.

“I don’t think the resolution will have any specific impact on Taiwan’s relations with Japan. We just hope Japan will begin to hear the voices of the world on this issue,” said Huang Sue-ying, an opposition Democratic Progressive Party legislator and co-sponsor of the resolution.

Taiwan’s parliament, or Legislative Yuan, Huang said, timed the resolution to roughly coincide with a similar resolution passed by South Korea’s National Assembly last month. That resolution calls on Japan to apologize to and compensate surviving comfort women in South Korea.

Taiwan, Huang said, has about 20 aging survivors for whom the resolution “is their last chance to voice their requests to Japan.”

“I fear that the survivors will all pass on in the next two years,” she added.



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November 9, 2008

The ghost is still haunting

Filed under: , , Canadian politics, Chinatown, News, politics — admin @ 7:34 am

At a time when Harper seems to be loosening up? Had these “grassroots” spoken up before the election, there would be no Tory government. This country has no appetite for Bush’s right wing movement.

Grassroots Tories urging PM to move to right
Demands at next weekend’s policy convention could challenge Harper’s effort to soften party’s image

Globe and Mail — Grassroots Conservatives are urging Prime Minister Stephen Harper to act on long-standing demands of the Canadian right, such as less government and more health-care privatization, as they head into the party’s second-ever policy convention next weekend in Winnipeg.

Resolutions from Conservatives across the country have been whittled down to a few dozen that will be up for debate on the convention floor.

The final list includes demands that, if adopted, could challenge Mr. Harper’s efforts to soften the party’s image among those who aren’t traditional Conservatives.

“I think people are becoming impatient and they want to see some action. They want to see this government deliver a real, small c, conservative agenda,” said Gerry Nicholls, a conservative commentator with the Democracy Institute.

Mr. Nicholls said he expects traditional conservatives will be more vocal in their demands now that the party has two consecutive victories under its belt. He predicted resistance to Mr. Harper’s view that conservative policies must be adopted slowly so as not to alienate Canadian voters.

That tension may surface at the convention over several issues, including extra legal penalties for individuals who commit violence against a pregnant woman. The item is up for debate in spite of the fact that Mr. Harper distanced himself from the idea just days before the last election. His move blunted criticism that the measure, advocated at the time through a Conservative private member’s bill, could criminalize abortion indirectly.

The last time Conservatives gathered to vote on policy in 2005, Mr. Harper was spotted backstage kicking a chair in frustration as his young party threatened to unravel. In the end, Tories emerged united with a platform that sidelined thorny issues such as abortion and capital punishment.

Don Plett, the president of the party’s national council, said he expects lots of lively debate but pointed out the majority of the resolutions simply update policy to reflect the government’s decisions.

“Much of what we have there [in resolutions are] things that we have campaigned on in the past and the Conservative government has in fact implemented,” said Mr. Plett, who helped merge the Progressive Conservatives and the Canadian Alliance in 2003.

Conservative Party spokesman Ryan Sparrow played down the potential impact of the convention resolutions on government decisions.

“They’re just like any other consultation you would have with any stakeholder group,” he said, confirming the government will not be bound by the Winnipeg decisions.

Neither Mr. Plett nor Mr. Sparrow would comment on specific resolutions.

Delegates from Calgary are proposing 10-year, renewable term limits for Supreme Court judges and a reaffirmation of Parliament’s power to ignore the court’s rulings through the notwithstanding clause of the Constitution.

The two resolutions relating to the Supreme Court fit with long-standing concerns expressed within the party over the power of the courts to change Canadian law.

The proposal to limit Supreme Court justices to renewable 10-year terms is among the few major new ideas to be discussed at next weekend’s convention.

But the debate over the Supreme Court will be largely symbolic, given that term limits can’t be imposed without changing the Constitution, said University of Alberta law Professor Joanna Harrington.

Liberal MP Marlene Jennings said the proposal would also politicize the judiciary, as they would be dependent on government for renewals.

“It would cast a pall over their independence,” she said.

Can you imagine if this country could still be named “Canada” if these agendas got put through?

Resolutions up for debate

  • Supreme Court judges Supreme Court of Canada judges should serve 10-year renewable terms.
  • Health care Provinces should be encouraged “to further experiment with different means of delivering universal health care utilizing both the public and private health sectors.”
  • Auto emissions Canada should match California’s more stringent standards.
  • Military parents If they die while serving Canada, their children should be given free tuition to postsecondary institutions.
  • Human Rights Commission The Canadian commission’s authority to investigate complaints related to hate messages should be removed.
  • Streamlining The government should “streamline government services and eliminate waste, unnecessary overlap and duplication between the levels of government.”
  • Free votes Replace current party policy that all votes, other than the budget and main estimates, are free votes, with the policy that a Conservative government will make “most votes free.”


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November 8, 2008

Good news: Harper turns conciliatory

Filed under: , , Canadian politics, Chinatown, News, Stephane Dion, Stephen Harper, politics — admin @ 2:47 am

The Harper government is finally toning down its antagonism towards their political enemies. I love that. In fact, if Harper et al are serious about long term governance, all of them should learn to be tolerant with dissenters. I wish that the Chinese politicians could also learn to pick up that manner. I’m already seeing Alice Wong showing a more moderate attitude lately. After all, this is OUR country, right? I just love cooperation between different people. Maybe that’s because I’m a Libra. :)

Harper seeks co-operation, not confrontation in Commons

CP - The Harper government is striking a conciliatory tone as it prepares for the opening of Parliament, emphasizing the need for co-operation on the economy and downplaying the potential for confrontation.

As part of the kinder, gentler tone, Prime Minister Stephen Harper had a “cordial and businesslike” meeting Friday with Liberal Leader Stephane Dion.

He plans to meet the two other opposition leaders in the coming days, consulting them on priorities for the new parliamentary session, which opens Nov. 18.

A senior government official says Harper intends to focus almost exclusively on the global economic crisis and measures to help Canada weather the storm.

The official suggests Harper isn’t eager to immediately push ahead with a series of tough-on-crime proposals, including stiffer sentences for young offenders and reduced use of conditional sentences.

All three opposition parties say they will oppose the measures, even at the risk of defeating the minority Conservative government.

“We are focused on the economy,” the official told reporters at a background briefing. “We are not seeking confrontation in areas that are secondary to the economic focus of this government.”

During last month’s election campaign, Harper declared that the crime measures would be matters of confidence, defeat of which would plunge the country into another election.

The official refused to say Friday whether that threat still holds. He said only that the government reserves the right to determine what matters are considered votes of confidence.

The official said Dion agreed with Harper that Parliament’s central focus must be the economy. The two further agreed that the government should speed up infrastructure investments, refuse to raise business taxes and review expenditures to find billions in savings.

“I think it bodes well for the return of the House that this initial meeting was cordial.”



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November 5, 2008

PoMo, W. Vancouver Oct 2008 house prices fall over 20% year-on-year

Filed under: , , Chinatown, Vancouver, house prices, real estate — admin @ 6:29 am

REBGV release – Housing price reductions across Greater Vancouver over the last six months have eliminated price gains witnessed in the first quarter of 2008.

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) reports that residential benchmark prices, as calculated by the MLSLink Housing Price Index®, declined 8.8% between May and October 2008, resulting in a 3.9% year-to-date price reduction for detached, attached and apartment properties in Greater Vancouver between Octobers 2007 and 2008. In May 2008, the overall residential benchmark price was $568,411, compared to $518,668 in October 2008.

“Home sales are not keeping pace with the positive economic conditions in BC,” said REBGV president, Dave Watt. “That’s a direct result of a loss of consumer confidence in the overall market. Accordingly, today’s housing market is characterized by moderating home prices and wide selection. It’s definitely a buyer’s market.”

Residential property sales in Greater Vancouver declined 55% in October 2008 to 1,364 from the 3,028 sales recorded in October 2007.

Active listings totalled 19,257 in October 2008, a three% decline from the 19,852 active listings reported in September 2008. New listings for detached, attached and apartment properties increased one% to 4,867 in October 2008 compared to October 2007, when 4,819 new units were listed.

Sales of detached properties in October 2008 declined 56.5% to 493 from the 1,133 sales recorded during the same period in 2007. The benchmark price for detached properties declined 4.7% from October 2007 to $695,962. Since May 2008, the benchmark price for a detached property in Greater Vancouver has declined 9.8%.

Sales of apartment properties in October 2008 declined 52.7% to 647, compared to 1,368 sales in October 2007. The benchmark price of an apartment property declined 3.5% from October 2007 to $358,359. Since May 2008, the benchmark price for an apartment property in Greater Vancouver has declined eight%.

Attached property sales in October 2008 are down 57.5% to 224, compared with the 527 sales in October 2007. The benchmark price of an attached unit declined 1.4% in Greater Vancouver between October 2007 and 2008 to $448,152. Since May 2008, the benchmark price for an attached property in Greater Vancouver has declined 6.4%.



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Filed under: , , Canada, Chinatown — admin @ 5:49 am

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November 4, 2008

We need immigrants, but how to retain them?

Filed under: , , Chinatown, Immigrants, Immigration, economy — admin @ 2:23 pm

Immigration Reforms Put Canada On The Right Track

Conference Board of Canada release — The convergence of Canada’s “temporary” and “permanent” systems is providing a more flexible and adaptive approach to immigration, according to a Conference Board study, Renewing Immigration: Towards a Convergence and Consolidation of Canada’s Immigration Policies and Systems.

“Canada’s permanent and temporary immigration systems are changing to better address the needs of business, provinces and migrants themselves,” said Douglas Watt, Associate Director, Organizational Effectiveness and Learning. “These changes are positive steps, but more needs to be done. Canada is competing with other countries for top international talent and a willingness to adjust programs and policies is the hallmark of successful immigration systems.”

In recent years, increasing numbers of temporary workers have been accepted into Canada to fill gaps in labour markets. The following changes demonstrate the convergence between the temporary and permanent systems:

  • improvements to Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker (TFW) Program, as well as the increasing use of mechanisms driven by employer—and regional—demand for skilled workers, particularly the Provincial Nominee Program (PNP);
  • the newly created Canadian Experience Class; and
  • improvements to the International Student Program, the Off-Campus Work Permit Program, and the Post-Graduation Work Permit Program.

The Conference Board provides a number of recommendations to make Canada’s immigrations systems more effective, which reflect the global trends in immigration:

  • Address the growing importance of skills-based migration to meet labour market needs—Australia has been a leader in this area; the federal government’s Bill C-50 is a positive move in this direction.
  • Maintain a robust commitment to humanitarian-based immigration while expanding skills-based migration—there is no need for an either/or choice between them.
  • Take further steps to help temporary foreign workers become permanent employees by creating new and improved pathways to permanent residency.
  • Harness the growing engagement of employers in immigration—the rapid expansion in size and scope of the TFW and the PNP and other programs demonstrates the growing interest and involvement of employers, but there is scope for greater engagement.
  • Increase settlement and integration services, especially in urban areas—The size and diversity of immigrant communities, especially within city-regions, has increased the need for greater support for existing immigrant communities.
  • Link immigration programs and practices to other major government policies and strategies—governments are increasingly linking immigration to overarching social, economic, and environmental objectives.

The following is a story carried by TorStar on the report.

Economy will need more immigrants
Report says newcomers help fuel Canada’s growth, but policies should make it easier for them to stay

Immigration levels in the country will have to go up significantly for future economic growth, the Conference Board of Canada reports.

To meet long-term domestic labour market needs and to remain competitive in the global search for talent Canada will have to increase its number of immigrants from the existing 250,000 to 360,000 annually by 2025.

The report highlights what should be done to meet the country’s economic needs through immigration, including measures to allow the growing number of temporary foreign workers the option to become permanent residents. It also suggests increasing refugee intakes to maintain a well-balanced immigration system.

The study, released yesterday, came as Canada’s immigration system rapidly expands the temporary foreign worker stream to fill short-term labour market needs. As the report points out, this does not meet long-term objectives. The current changes have also made the selection process more restrictive for applicants as the Immigration Minister can cherry-pick prospective temporary migrants.

Conference board associate director Douglas Watt, the report’s author, said immigrant workers choose destinations best suited to their interests and should be given the option to remain in the country. This would help retain the best talent, while attracting other foreign candidates.

“Our policies are not just about what we want,” Watt said in an interview. “Migrant workers and immigrants also have wants.”

He did praise the government’s new initiatives, including: the provincial nominee program that allows each province to independently attract immigrants; relaxation of work restrictions for foreign students; and the newly created Canadian Experience Class that allows migrants here temporarily to apply for permanent status without leaving the country.

But Watt said more has to be done for migrants with temporary status to become permanent residents.

“Transparency about how the temporary and permanent systems actually work is crucial,” cautioned the report, titled Renewing Immigration: Towards a Convergence and Consolidation of Canada’s Immigration Policies and Systems, which looks at the immigration system from the perspective of Canada’s economic needs.

Officials have to be transparent to migrants about the selection criteria, wages and working conditions, and ensure they are aware of what social, health and community services they will have access to, the report noted. Ottawa must also help employers navigate the temporary and permanent systems to meet their labour market needs.

Last year, Canada admitted 475,965 migrants, but more than half of them were temporary workers and international students. In 2006, for the first time, Canada’s temporary foreign workers outnumbered the permanent residents admitted through the “skilled immigrant” and “economic” classifications.

With the increasing numbers of skilled immigrants and temporary workers, the report states refugee admissions, which have flatlined, should also be raised to meet the country’s economic needs.



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We do need more immigrants

Filed under: , , Chinatown, Immigrants, Immigration, economy — admin @ 1:52 pm

Found this article written by the CEO of the Conference Board of Canada in response to James Bissett’s op-ed “The truth about immigration is that costs exceed benefits”. This article is a bit old (September 22, 2008) but I think the arguments are still valid and strong.

We do need more immigrants

By Anne Golden

Last Thursday’s Citizen carried an op-ed by James Bissett, former executive director of the Canadian Immigration Service, that reiterated traditional arguments against increased immigration (”Truth and immigration”). It argued that immigrants are a net burden on the economy and social infrastructure and that immigrants push down wages for Canadian workers and add to unemployment, poverty and crime. Further the article asserted the “only reason” why political parties “push for high immigration intake” is that “they see every new immigrant as a potential vote for their party.”

This position is simply wrong. Here’s why.

There is no evidence in Canada that immigration pushes down wages for Canadian workers. The data most commonly cited are American and out of date. Far from being a burden on Canada’s economic and social infrastructure, immigrants are essential to our economic prosperity and community vitality.
In 2006, 55 per cent of the principal applicant immigrants to Canada (138,257 persons in all) were admitted under the economic class of immigration. This included skilled workers, entrepreneurs, investors, the self-employed, and provincial nominees; in other words, immigrants who brought much-needed skills, capital, and entrepreneurial spirit.

Immigrants will be even more important in the coming years. The “baby boom” generation that entered the work force in the early 1960s to late 1970s is now beginning to retire. These workers cannot be completely replaced by recent graduates from the post-secondary and high school education systems; there are just not enough young Canadians available to do it — thanks to the sheer size of this generation combined with our decisions to have smaller families over the past few decades. This is why Statistics Canada predicts that by 2011 all of Canada’s net labour force growth will be derived from immigration. And why by 2030, it predicts that immigration will be the only source of population growth.

But what of the immigrants who have recently arrived in Canada? Mr. Bissett says that more than half live in poverty. In fact, one-fifth of immigrants entering Canada during the 1990s found themselves in chronic low income for the first five years. Yes, this rate is higher than among the Canadian born, and recent immigrants do earn less than equivalent Canadian workers. There’s no question that immigrants face a tough time in establishing themselves in our country, partly because their prior skills and experience often go unrecognized.

We need to improve in these areas, not only for the sake of immigrants but for the sake of this country as a whole. The Conference Board’s research has shown that closing “the learning recognition gap” among immigrants would add tens of thousands of skilled workers to the labour force resulting in a $4.1- to $5.9-billion boost to our national income.

We can also do a better job of selecting immigrants based on skills, while maintaining our commitment to immigration for family reunification and humanitarian reasons. Australia has already moved strongly in this direction — without ignoring family class immigrants –and the unemployment rate among its skilled immigrants is seven per cent or below, 18 months after arrival. Canada is heading in the same direction with the recent reforms to its immigration system.

The current backlog in the immigration queue is a legacy of an outdated system. Canada now faces an increasingly competitive global economy, and the skills, knowledge, and diverse talents that immigrants bring will help ensure that Canada’s prosperity is sustainable.

Sometimes, the politicians do get it right.

Anne Golden is president and CEO of the Conference Board of Canada.



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