Immigrants to Canada are increasingly leaving this country for opportunities elsewhere, according to a study(opens in a new tab) conducted by the Institute for Canadian Citizenship and the Conference Board of Canada.

In fact, the number of immigrants who left Canada rose by 31 per cent above the national average(opens in a new tab) in 2017 and 2019.

According to the study, factors that influence onward migration include economic integration, a sense of belonging, racism, homeownership, or a lack thereof, and economic opportunities in other countries, the report revealed.

  • ryan213
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    132 years ago

    Oh good, maybe this will help with the housing crisis. Lol

    But in seriousness, I know a few people who’ve moved to the US for better pay. Not worth it for me but I can see why people move.

    • @Numpty@lemmy.ca
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      92 years ago

      I’m planning to move. I was born in Canada. I worked overseas for several years. I came back to Canada and I’m leaving again. Hopefully permanently. Better pay is definitely one aspect (although it’d take 10x increase to get me to move to the USA), but it’s not the only one. Quality of life is another MAJOR point that Canadians miss out on in a big way. Yeah you get a bigger home… and a fancy big truck… but to get that, you work yourself to death, you pay insane prices for things, and you have to live with stroads…

  • @beatensoup@baraza.africa
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    12 years ago

    I wonder who is expected to fix the country if everyone hops from whatever place they are for the next one as long as their personal income gets a little more money. Don’t get me wrong, I am all for personal progress and it’s pursuit. But I also realize personal progress is anchored on collective stability. There is something off with someone who hops and ditches a place based on assumed better outcomes round the bend.

  • bbbhltz
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    22 years ago

    Sounds like maplewashing still works. Immigrants are drawn to Canada, only to discover it ain’t all that.

    I would love to move back home, but, as others have mentioned, the prices and healthcare situation are bitter pills… Also, finding a decent job. I know someone who went from making 140k as an escalation manager for an international IT company, to beng laid off, to spending 7 months job hunting, to finally working as a fry cook just to pay rent.

  • Peanut
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    12 years ago

    “What we found is a withering, uncertain and anti-working class government, happy to sell promises it never intended on keeping”

    I think this and the “hard work does not correlate with rewards” seem to be apt.

    Many are brought over with flowery words hiding the fact that they will be competing with an already struggling working class.

    Everybody I know thinks trying to raise a kid right now is not only unfeasable, but unethical. The couple working class people I know who had kids regardless are in debt and struggling despite working as much as they can.

    Then the newspapers post articles like “why are selfish lazy millennials choosing not to obtain things like homes and cars, or attempting to have children.”

    It’s frustrating and disgusting. Especially when you see things like the complete failure of antitrust. Big surprise that Rogers just locked out hundreds of old Shaw union workers.

    There’s something terribly wrong with the power imbalance, and this is more evidence to throw on the depressingly obvious pile.

  • @girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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    62 years ago

    “We are thus compelled to return to a society where taxes lead to tangible public services, healthcare is a given right, not a privilege and where schools are havens of learning, unmarred by the pervasive reach of politics.”

    Canada’s gleaming palace of prosperity is actually a slum run by greedy politicians and hedge funds who just want to steal everyone’s money for themselves.

    Born and bred in Canada, but if I could afford it I’d head to Europe as well.

  • @zephyreks@lemmy.ca
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    2 years ago

    Canada got its key industries stripped away by the US (Boeing to Bombardier) and China (Huawei to Nortel). Now? All the jobs are fleeing South of the border and people are fleeing with it.

    At least Huawei still employs a fuck ton of Canadian tech workers and is rapidly expanding. Huawei is footing the bill for a ton of big tech conferences in Canada. They’re sponsoring a bunch of projects for Canadian undergraduate engineering students. They’re hiring a sizable chunk of the graduates from Canadian universities in their focus areas and are happy to foot the bill for technical training. Frankly, Huawei is doing a better job of creating and keeping Canadian talent within Canada than most Canadian companies. They relinquished any IP control over research done in conjunction with Canadian universities.

    Meanwhile, Microsoft uses it’s Canadian offices as visa waiting rooms before shipping them off to the US.

  • @xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    412 years ago

    Canada has become a car culture nation, I’m living abroad right now so that I can be a pedestrian without fearing for my life.

    • Shake747
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      62 years ago

      We’re the second largest nation in the world by landmass, but with a population that’s only the size of California.

      How do you not have a “car culture” in a nation like that? People need to get around, and transit can really only accommodate those in cities

      • Pxtl
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        162 years ago

        About half the country lives in the Windsor to Quebec city corridor, a region with population density of Spain.

        Most of the northern wilderness is unoccupied. It makes no sense to say we can’t have good passenger rail just because Victoria Island exists.

      • Cavalier7435
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        112 years ago

        Do people have to drive all the way across the country every single day? The size of the country does not dictate its dependency on the automobile. North American cities were walkable before the car and they can be walkable again. Car dependency is a result of policy not the size of the country.

      • @DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca
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        172 years ago

        The issue isn’t that living in Edwin or Newton in Manitoba is based around driving a car, it’s that life in Winnipeg, Manitoba is still based around driving a car. The problem is that car culture is still what cities are built around.

      • PuddingFeeling [she/her]
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        2 years ago

        Cities need to be much more transit/pedestrian oriented because they do not cover much area.

        Cars should be used for servicing the country and for visiting towns.

        • defunct_punk
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          42 years ago

          “Yes you’re right but I’m going to phrase it like you’re wrong”

    • 1bluepixel
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      152 years ago

      The state of public transport in Montreal makes me so angry. This city used to be an examplar of public transit.