Vancouver, Toronto, and Edmonton are the most likely destinations for Canadian immigrants.
by aman sharma Canada Immigration,Canada PR VisaVancouver,
Toronto, and Edmonton have the highest retention rates for immigrants,
according to a study published by Statistics Canada.
In order
to establish policies that attract newcomers to a certain location, it is
necessary to research where immigrants choose to reside.
We can
discover what kind of locales immigrants find appealing and what variables
influence their decision to stay or depart using mobility data. Statistics
Canada recently published a report on the cities and regions where immigrants
have lived the longest. Researchers
used the 2020 Longitudinal Immigration Database, which is often used to study
the economic impact of Canadian
immigrants. For this study, they focused on immigrants who arrived in
Canada in 2014.
Vancouver,
Toronto, and Edmonton are three cities in Canada.
Immigrants
who arrived in Vancouver in 2014 had the greatest retention percentage at the
city level, with slightly more than 86 percent five years later. Another way to
look at it is that 86 out of 100 people who moved to Vancouver in 2014 were
still paying taxes in 2019.
With
around 86 percent of these 2014 arrivals staying in the city five years later,
Toronto had the second highest retention rate. With approximately 85% of the
vote, Edmonton finished in third.
Compared
to any other group of immigrants, family-sponsored immigrants were the most
likely to stay in their planned city of entry. Immigrants in Canada can be
classified in three ways: economic immigrants, refugees, and family-class
immigrants sponsored by Canadians, often their spouses.
Halifax
had the greatest retention percentage in Atlantic Canada, at approximately 58
percent. Atlantic Canada's historically low retention rate led to the creation
of the Atlantic Immigration Pilot. With nearly 63 percent, Nova Scotia has the
highest retention rate in the area.
Immigrants
frequently return to the province where they worked prior to receiving PR.
Immigrants'
decisions to migrate across areas are influenced by their employment or
educational experience in Canada.
Employment
appears to be a significant element in employee retention. Those with job
experience who became permanent residents in 2014 were more likely to stay in
the province or territory where they were admitted.
93 percent
of refugees with prior employment experience remained in their province of
admission. The retention percentage for those who just held work permits before
becoming permanent residents was somewhat higher than 90%.
The
retention rate for newcomers with job and study experience was around 81
percent. Immigrants who just had study permits before obtaining permanent
residency had the lowest retention rates, at around 79%. Although students may
relocate more frequently in search of work, this study did not look into the
precise reasons why immigrants choose to relocate.
In
general, most immigrants remain in the province or area where they were
admitted.
Nearly 86
percent of immigrants in the research stayed in their home province or
territory five years following entry. Overall, Ontario had the greatest
retention rate, at almost 94%, followed by British Columbia at nearly 90%, and
Alberta at 89 percent.
Those who
have relatives in the province or area where they were admitted were more
likely to stay. More than 93 percent of family-sponsored immigrants were
retained after five years. Refugees stayed around 86 percent of the time,
whereas economic immigrants stayed about 82 percent of the time.
In addition,
the study discovered that immigrants were more inclined to relocate in the
first few years after their entry. Immigrants who had been in Canada for ten
years had a retention rate of approximately 86 percent, compared to roughly 88
percent for those who had been here for five years. Because the difference
between the two time frames is only 2%, the first five years appear to be more
volatile.
At ten
years, retention rates by province and immigrant class were identical to those
seen at five years. The highest 10-year retention rates were found in Ontario
(91.5 percent), British Columbia (87.3 percent), and Alberta (86.1 percent). At 58.0 percent, Nova Scotia has the highest
retention rate of all the Atlantic provinces. The majority of refugees (92%)
and those who merely held work permits prior to immigration (88.3%) stayed in
the province or territory where they were admitted.
For more
info, please Call: +91-7503832132,
+91-9131059075, Write to us at: info@aptechvisa.com
Or Fill Free
Canada Immigration Assessment Form
Sponsor Ads
Created on Jan 7th 2022 04:44. Viewed 168 times.