Those are lies being told by the Trudeau Liberals to justify his mass immigration policy. This you cannot ignore economics and talk about demographics. Trudeau's is in the Century Initiative and they want never ending GDP growth. They are just concerned about geopolitics. Trudeau had his self-serving agenda to have that seat on the UN Security Council. But his open border policy caused surging poverty. GDP per capita has dropped. You will never be able to address declining productivity till you address the housing crisis caused by mass immigration.I don't think you understand demographics. We have an aging population, all those boomers are now either retired or very close to it. Some stats show that by 2030, a quarter of the Canadian population will be over the age of 65. Which means they are not working, but living off off CPP, OAS, and whatever their retirement savings are. It also means that we'll be spending more on them, which requires a workforce to support them and to fill the jobs they've retired from. Without immigration, our population will decline. That is a fact. As mentioned, out natural birthrate is below replacement levels, as it is in most industrialized countries (US, Japan, UK, Germany, etc. ). That basically means the country will not be able to support itself, leading to a drop in our standard of living.
Now, Trudeau's government recognized this, and opened up immigration. On some level, it was the correct thing to do. HOWEVER - I think we can all agree that it was executed very poorly. It isn't an easy thing to do in a way that doesn't squeeze our social services or housing. On some level, if they planned for this better, it could have worked, but it would've taken multiple years to lay the ground work (like building more housing), but the challenge is knowing where the immigrants would like to live. I mean, Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver have always been magnets for new immigrants, but we're seeing more going to places like Edmonton. So, where do you build the housing if we allow the immigrants to settle where ever they like? (I should point out the housing is NOT just for immigrants. More housing options would help most Canadians with lower rents and options to buy, but could hurt prices for homeowners).
The bottom line is Canada needs more immigrants. I get the feeling that many on this board are OK with that, as long as they're European. Which is sad. But, I think we will be able to look at Japan in the coming decade to see how they respond. According to this article:
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2023/03/30/business/economy-business/japan-worker-shortfall-study/
Japan will need 11 million more workers over the next 15 years, as the workforce is expected to contract by 12%.
So, unless Canada can have a MASSIVE baby boom that puts the 1940s/50s to shame, we'll need to get more folks from across the globe to maintain our country and standard of living. But, there are also opportunities here. If global warming continues, the far north could become significantly more hospitable, meaning we could have major cities up there in 50 years. Who knows...
Now lets get to the economics and reality of the situation. The retirement age was based on the reality of 100 years ago. But lets get real, the problem we see today is being caused by because people are living longer then they did a 100 years ago. Advances in technology and medicine is a big factor. What they need to do is adjust to the new reality, raising the retirement age by 2 years would reduce the financial burden considerably. In Denmark the retirement age is 70.
But if the goal was to increase the working population then why give full immigration to the retired parents of new arrivals? Harper gave them super visa but Trudeau changed it because he wanted rapidly increasing population at any cost. Seems counterproductive. They get access to universal healthcare and can collect OAS. Does not make much sense to me. Immigrants 65 and over who just arrived to Canada are not eligible for pension. So when they apply for social assistance in Ontario they are granted OW, which is Ontario Works. It is a kind of welfare, it includes money for food, shelter, clothing, and other household costs, the cost of prescription medications, etc.. Then they are fast tracked to automatic ODSP which is Ontario Disability Support Program which provides financial assistance to those who are disabled and cannot work, until they meet all the eligibility criteria to get OAS which is 10 years residency. OAS is Old Age Security which is basically the equivalent of Welfare but for those who are 65 and over. This clogged up ODSP for people who truly need the assistance.
Then Trudeau brought in the worst type of immigration which are asylum seekers. Many are fake refugees. They get free hotels, monthly paychecks, healthcare benefits, free cellphones, among many other things. Apparently refugees costed the Canadian economy billions of dollars. So if the case is to have more productive people to pay for OAS then why are they wasting so much money for asylum seekers? They are leechers and do not contribute anything. 40 years ago refugees did not get much but now they are showered with so much social benefits. Trudeau needed to vet who comes into the country. We need productive immigrants.
Then there is the economics of this. Mass immigration caused a housing crisis. The young generation will be living much longer with their parents due to unaffordable costs. The prices are way too high. Food prices are also out of control. That is what happens with you got a rapidly growing population. Look at every third world country and they all have one thing in common, a rapidly growing population. This is not sustainable at all.
Dvous11 said it right, Trudeau's mass immigration policy was nothing but a ponzi scheme. And paying people to have kids is in essence turning kids into a commodity.
Last edited:





