Canada bet big on immigration to juice the economy but failed to build infrastructure. Now it's hitting the brakes.
I have no strong feelings about immigration. As far as I can tell, the feds went hard on bringing people in, but didn't do their homework when it came to ensuring appropriate services existed for the growing population.
Our infrastructure was already strained beforehand, and the extra few percent of population have exacerbated the many pre-existing problems.
The increase in immigration has just made the holes in our infrastructure more obvious. We've had decades of under investment in public sectors including transit, housing, and healthcare. With the increase of immigration, the immigration became a convenient excuse for these holes we can complain about and point fingers at instead of actually patching these holes.
The only real conversation I've seen about the holes (and immigration) are that the holes need to be fixed. I haven't seen sustained complaints about the people immigrating or immigration itself.
My media diet is pretty centre: G&M, CBC, the Guardian, and Lemmy.
I have no strong feelings about immigration. As far as I can tell, the feds went hard on bringing people in, but didn’t do their homework when it came to ensuring appropriate services existed for the growing population.
The Feds did this because it was cheaper. They did their homework--inasmuch as they know we have a demographic problem--but didn't do the hard, expensive and unpopular part, which was ensuring a) that infrastructure would exist to support the people brought in, and b) taxing the wealthy to make sure a) happened.
It's very similar to the feds' policy on drugs: do the cheap half of the solution (decriminalization) but not the expensive part (comprehensive public housing & mental-health services).
This is neoliberalism in action, and it's something both the red and blue parties will do: if it can be solved by doing nothing, or at least doing less, they'll do it. If it involves giving public money to private entities, they'll do it. If it's a tax cut, grant or "accelerator fund", they're all over it. If it involves long-term funding commitments, permanent staffing levels, expensive facilities and the need to tax the rich, they'll shut up and look at their shoes.
I'm frankly amazed they announced a capital gains increase, but I'll believe it when I see it survive the year.
do the cheap half of the solution (decriminalization) but not the expensive part (comprehensive public housing & mental-health services).
This is neoliberalism in action
Agreed.
I'm frankly amazed they announced a capital gains increase, but I'll believe it when I see it survive the year.
My bet is that it'll survive until the next election. This budget was a very timid step towards addressing our polycrisis, but it won't be enough to prevent Poilievre from taking power. Then he'll ax it.
I'm not just talking about physical infrastructure. I'm including lack of healthcare capacity (family doctors, staffed ERs, etc), missing schools (classes run out of portables, enough teachers to teach, etc), homeless shelters, rehab facilities, effective transit, etc.
It seems like we stopped building a lot of that stuff during the cuts in the 1990s, and we never really started again.
Yep, another clickbait headline. We're still very pro-immigration, it's just a matter of easing it off while the housing shortage is publicly on fire. Long term, newcomers may well be a big part of the solution.
KITCHENER, Ontario — Canada’s broad support for immigration, which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said is necessary to counter an aging labor force and low fertility rates, has set the country apart.
But behind the scenes of that 2022 announcement, the Canadian Press reported, federal public servants had warned that rapid population growth could strain the health-care system and housing affordability.
Governments of all kinds have encouraged their arrival, said Lisa Brunner, a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of British Columbia, which “had a ripple effect because higher education and immigration got so intertwined.”
Analysts say that while population growth has played a role, the roots of Canada’s housing affordability crisis are complex and fall under the jurisdiction of all levels of government, encompassing issues such as zoning restrictions and shortages of skilled construction workers.
In the federal budget plan introduced this month, the government said the number of temporary residents is expected to fall by about 600,000, “which will result in a significant easing in demand across the housing market.”
“At the same time, we must ensure robust pathways to permanent residence for those who wish to make Canada their home in the long term, and avoid the pitfalls of an economy built solely on temporary workers,” said Jessica Kingsbury, a department spokeswoman.
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