Canada

Last Updated on July 28, 2021

Halfway through the year, Canada had only welcomed a smidgeon more than a third of the new permanent residents that Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino wants to let into Canada this year.

Despite that shortfall, though, the immigration minister still maintains this year’s immigration target will be met.

“Against all odds, Canada continues to lead the world in immigration,” Mendicino reportedly told The Globe and Mail earlier this month. “We are going to make good on our commitment to land 401,000 new permanent residents.”


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Ottawa’s own figures, though, show the country only welcomed 108,730 new permanent residents in the first five months of this year. According to the national daily newspaper, Canada welcomed another 35,600 into the country in June, bringing the total for the first half of the year to 144,330.

That’s just under 36 per cent of the 2021 target of 401,000. 


New Permanent Resident Admissions, 2020 and 2021


Canada Needs To Admit Record Numbers Of Immigrants To Hit Target

That means Ottawa would still need to approve 256,670 applications for permanent residents to meet its immigration target for this year, or more than 42,778 new permanent residents every month for the rest of the year. 

Since the start of 2015, Canadian immigration officials have never even come close to hitting those kinds of numbers of new permanent residents per month, or 33.5 per cent less than it would take to hit this year’s target.

The highest number of new permanent residents approved to Canada in a single month came last year, in July, when Ottawa let in 36,615 new permanent residents.

In 2019, the last full year before the COVID-19 pandemic hit Canada and led to border closures and public health restrictions, Canadian immigration officials were approving an average of 28,431 new permanent residents into the country every month.

The country’s 2021‒2023 Immigration Levels Plan has set immigration targets of about one per cent of the Canadian population for three years starting in 2021. That’s 401,000 permanent residents this year, 411,000 in 2022 and 421,000 in 2023.

The federal government’s previous plan set targets of 351,000 in 2021 and 361,000 in 2022.

This is not the first time the immigration minister has doubled down on his claim Canada will meet its immigration target this year.

“I am confident that we are doing everything we can to meet that target and we will meet that target and the reason it is important to hit that target is because immigrants create jobs … and allow us to meet our workforce needs,” he said in May.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has also undertaken several measures to boost immigration. 

In one draw, the IRCC slashed the Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) scores, resulting in five times as many Invitations to Apply (ITAs) issued as usual. 

Ottawa then followed that up by launching six new pathways to permanent residency for temporary foreign workers and international grads. The cap on anglophone applicants under three of those new steams was 90,000 but there is no cap on the number of francophone and bilingual candidates.

New Pathways Help Open Up Canada To New Immigrants

The new pathways to permanent residency opened up a broad category of occupations deemed essential, including many in such areas as manufacturing and food processing that are often low-paying and not always regarded as all that important.

The big unknowns for Canadian immigration in the second half of this year will be the possibility of a fourth wave of COVID-19 and its impact given the rising level of vaccination across the country – and the re-opening of the Canadian border.

Under a phased re-opening plan, Ottawa’s first step on Aug. 9 will be to allow into the country American citizens and Canadian permanent residents who are currently residing in the United States and have been fully vaccinated at least 14 days prior to entering Canada for non-essential travel.

Then, on Sept. 7, provided COVID-19 case counts remain low, Canada’s borders will re-open to any fully vaccinated travellers who have completed the full course of vaccination with a Government of Canada-accepted vaccine at least 14 days prior to entering Canada and who meet any specific entry requirements.

“We look forward to welcoming fully-vaccinated Americans shortly, followed by travellers from the rest of the world in early September,” said Mendicino. 

“Not only will this make a big difference for Canada’s travel and tourism industry and all those whose jobs depend on it, it will also make it easier for those with a Confirmation of Permanent Residence letter to come to Canada and play a role in our recovery from the pandemic.”

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