Canada further tightens rules on temporary workers, students

Canada is further reducing the number of study permits it will grant to foreign students and tightening eligibility for work permits in a bid to cut down on the number of temporary residents in the country, the government said on Wednesday.

The announcement comes as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government, trailing in the public opinion polls and coming off a major by-election loss this week, seeks to reduce the number of temporary residents – including international students and foreign workers – in the country.

The issue has become one of the most contentious in Canadian politics with a federal election due no later than October, 2025.

The changes announced on Wednesday would reduce the number of international study permits issued to 437,000 in 2025. Canada approved 509,390 in 2023, according to immigration department data, and 175,920 in the first seven months of 2024.

The changes would also limit work permit eligibility for spouses of some students and temporary foreign workers.

As Canada sees a spike in the number of refugee claimants, the government said Wednesday it planned to review measures to strengthen visa integrity and was “reviewing visa decision-making so that our highly trained officers have the right tools to detect fraud and reduce the number of non-genuine visitors.”

“The reality is that not everyone who wants to come to Canada will be able to—just like not everyone who wants to stay in Canada will be able to,” Immigration Minister Marc Miller said in a statement.

The government has already pledged to reduce the number of temporary residents to 5% of the total population. It was 6.8% in April.

Canada’s temporary foreign worker program has come under fire for being, in the words of a damning United Nations report, “a breeding ground for contemporary forms of slavery” – language Miller called “inflammatory.”

“The Ministers made no mention not even once about workers’ rights, instead continuing to obsess about numbers and cuts,” Syed Hussan, executive director of the Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, said in a statement.

“Reducing the numbers of migrants will not stop their exploitation; giving them equal rights and the power to exercise those rights will – and that is only possible through permanent resident status for all.”

Economist and Atkinson Fellow on the Future of Workers Armine Yalnizyan said she was disappointed Wednesday’s announcement did not include a plan to transition migrants from temporary status to permanent.

“These are not temporary jobs. Why aren’t we facilitating permanence for these people?” she asked.

“We are not going to grow economically without more newcomers. So we’ve got to be very clear on what the future path is.”

Migrants have been blamed for societal problems including a lack of affordable housing and ramped-up cost of living, even as post-pandemic inflation slowed to the Bank of Canada’s target of 2% annually in August.

Immigrant advocates and some economists argue the link between migrants and economic malaise is an oversimplification, and that vulnerable newcomers cannot be held responsible for complex economic problems.

Polls have shown a growing slice of the public thinks Canada is bringing in too many immigrants, and anti-migrant rhetoric and attacks have risen in Canada, once renowned for its welcoming stance toward newcomers.

Nonetheless, after years of increasing Canada’s ranks of temporary residents, its federal government is seeking to pull back.

In January, the government placed a two-year cap on international students, whose approvals are projected to decrease by almost half this year.

Earlier this month, the government walked back 2022 expansions to the temporary foreign worker program. In some sectors, it reduced the maximum share of any employer’s workforce that can be made up of low-wage, temporary foreign workers. It also ended, in some sectors, low-wage temporary foreign workers in communities with high unemployment rates.

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