Immigration Lunacy
Written by Paul Fromm
Tuesday, 15 November 2011 05:08
Immigration Lunacy

We've seen this before - the claim that refugees perform economic wonders
in this country. Gosh, humanitarianism and economic dynamism in
one efficient package. First of all, it strains credulity that every
single refugee plucked out of some goat-pen hell hole refugee camp (or
chancer who rolls up to a border point and says "Guess what? I'm claiming
refugee benefits!") is an idling chess grand master, world class thoracic
surgeon graduated from Johns Hopkins and fluent in English, French,
Esperanto and Pashtun.

Read carefully and it seems that refugee earnings do well ...
considering. Actually, they earn what sounds like a welfare salary. It
seems overly precious to worry about low skilled temporary worker
admissions when refugees have nothing whatever to recommend entry, apart
from need *(their* need). Not that low skilled temporary workers have
anything much to recommend them either, apart from spreading the misery (no
point in Toronto selfishly hogging all the immigrants is there?) Still, in
the chop logic of Cabnada's immigration planners, admission of low skilled
temporary foreign workers sure beats getting low skilled permanent
Canadians working.

This is such a nonsense, you hardly know where to start. It's as if Ottawa
has entirely lost its collective mind. If the mutton headed "thinking" at
Immigration is typical of other departments, we really are in for a rough
ride. IA recent story indicates tha Immigration Minister Jason Kenney is
calling for a moratorium, effective immediately, on parents and
grandparents entries. But wait, in reality, we will be getting *more *of
them under an extended visits visa system where they can stay for periods
of up to two years. Are we to assume that, at that point, they are
supposed to fly back home and enter anew (at least, until a friendly doctor
says they are in no shape to fly). The family is supposed to provide
private health insurance. Well, you can see where that will end. Under
existing regulations families are also supposed to sponsor relatives for
ten years. And we know how well that's working. If the family claims hard
times, do we really think Canadian hospitals will insist that Grandma
Jatinder not get her emergency kidney transplant?

It's maddening that, as far as Ottawa is concerned, there are only a fixed
number of approaches and it's just a matter of shuffling the deck until all
the cards are lined up properly: Hey, let's bring in more buy-your-way-in
immigrants, but as it was a disaster last time, let's make it a provincial
responsibility. Let's bring in fewer grandparents, but we'll really bring
in more, ... hey let's ....

Paul Fromm
Director
CANADA FIRST IMMIGRATION REFORM COMMITTEE


The federal government should focus on increasing the number of skilled
immigrants and refugees to boost the Canadian economy, a policy report
recommends.

On Tuesday, the Institute for Research on Public Policy released a report
showing that these two immigrant groups do better economically than any
other immigrant cohort entering the country.

Report authors Michael Abbott and Charles Beach say officials should
consider reducing total immigrant admission levels during recessions, when
Canada is hit with high unemployment periods, because immigrants are first
to lose their jobs.

The study was released days after the government said it plans to accept as
many as 10,000 more skilled workers into the country in 2012, in part to
help deal with a massive backlog in applications.

Researchers at IRPP, a non-partisan think-tank based in Montreal, studied
the 10-year annual incomes of three cohorts of four immigrants groups who
arrived as permanent residents in 1982, 1988 and 1994.

Immigrants entering Canada are classified under the categories of: refugee,
family-class (part of family re-unification) and economic — meaning skilled
workers.

"Skill-assessed immigrants, people who go through the point system,
consistently do better in terms of higher earning levels than other
arriving immigrants . . . 35 per cent better for men and 56 per cent for
women," said Beach.

"Refugees had the highest earning growth rates again for both men and women
across all entry groups . . . 29 per cent for men and 35 per cent for
women," he adds. [We still don't get this. If all newcomers arrive here
with "zero" as their starting income, how do the shockingly low earning
outcomes for refugees translate into the "highest earning growth rates"?]

"Refugees may start low and have low earnings initially, but their earnings
grow faster than other groups," said Beach. [Yeah, until they flatline at
$20,000]

Women in the family class had the lowest earnings.

Recessions, the report found, hit the wages of all groups of immigrants.

Immigration has steadily climbed in the past few decades in Canada — about
84,000 people came to this country in 1985, and immigration hit a 50-year
high of 281,000 people in 2010, according to Citizenship and Immigration
Canada.

But changes to Canada's immigration policy in recent years could be
detrimental to the country's economy and competitiveness, the report said.

Officials have narrowed their focus, the report said, to acquiring a
specific group of skilled workers — there are 29 priority occupations — and
placed a cap on how many of these people enter the country.

In June 2010, Citizenship and Immigration introduced a global cap of 20,000
people who would be accepted under federal skilled-worker applications,
along with a 1,000-person cap on the number of applicants accepted in each
occupation.

By July of this year, only 10,000 skilled applicants without an offer of
employment in Canada were admitted to the country under the Federal Skilled
Worker Program but the number of arrivals under the Provincial Nominee
Program and the Temporary Foreign Worker Program — neither of which is
skills-assessed — continued to climb.

"There has been a huge growth in the Provincial Nominee Program — while
that does a better job of getting people to regions and provinces and so
on, the fact is, more than half of those people who come in are roughly
low-skilled and the point of our study means, on average, they don't do as
well as people with more skills," said Beach.

They urge the federal government to consider tactics European countries
have taken in an attempt to sway skilled immigrants to their countries, and
noted that countries such as China and India, which are experiencing vast
economic growth, are retaining their own skilled workers and even
repatriating those who emigrated to Canada.

"In light of this increasing global competition, Canada cannot afford to be
complacent in seeking to attract and retain skilled workers. Yet there has
not been a major rethink of Canada's immigration objectives and policy
since the mid-1990s," the report warned.

The report's data show that within all three cohorts, there is a wide gap
between independent skilled workers' earnings and refugees and family-class
workers. Other economic-class workers still ranked second to independent
economic-class workers by a margin of as much as $10,000 each year.

For example, in 1982, independent skilled workers made a 10-year average of
$46,093 each year, while other economic class workers made just more than
$28,000. Family-class workers made an average of $27,643 and refugees, the
group that saw the highest growth in salary in every cohort, made $20,525.

The authors say their evidence shows it's "remarkably clear and uniform"
that skilled workers easily made the most contribution to the country's
labour market.

But they concede their data doesn't necessarily show that increased incomes
are linked to higher education or skills levels. [No? Is it perhaps tied
to the ability to communicate in an offical language?]

The authors recommend maintaining and even expanding skills-focused
initiatives, such as the Canadian Experience Class, instead of scaling down
efforts to attract immigrant candidates that could adapt to the workforce.

Wait times for applications, recognizing foreign credentials and modifying
the current points system so it examines youth, official language fluency
and skilled-trades needs are also areas officials need to improve, the
report noted. *(**Vancouver Sun*, Nov. 8, 2011)
 
Hear Paul Fromm on the Maggie Roddin Show
Written by Paul Fromm
Tuesday, 15 November 2011 05:05
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Hear Paul Fromm on the Maggie Roddin Show

http://theunsolicitedopinion.com/2011/11/14/monday-noverber-14th/ (
http://theunsolicitedopinion.com/2011/11/14/monday-noverber-14th/ )

Paul Fromm appeared today for two hours on Maggie Roddin's "The
Unsolicited Opinion" Show on the Republic Broadcasting Network.

He discussed:

* His own firing after six years of Jewish lobby pressure from his
English instructor position in Peel County
* Fascinating stories of politically correct hypocrisy
* The fight in Canada to secure free speech on the Internet
* The Stalinist tactics of human rights commissions

"Redistributing the Truth One Word at a Time."

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Hear Paul Fromm on the Maggie Roddin Show
Written by Paul Fromm
Tuesday, 15 November 2011 03:29
Hear Paul Fromm on the Maggie Roddin Show

http://theunsolicitedopinion.com/2011/11/14/monday-noverber-14th/

*Paul Fromm appeared today for two hours on Maggie Roddin's "The
Unsolicited Opinion" Show on the Republic Broadcasting Network.*
**
*He discussed:*

* His own firing after six years of Jewish lobby pressure from his English
instructor position in Peel County
* Fascinating stories of politically correct hypocrisy
* The fight in Canada to secure free speech on the Internet
* The Stalinist tactics of human rights commissions

*"Redistributing the Truth One Word at a Time."*
 
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