SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> IT Workplace >> Human Resources Issues

Canada seeks foreign workers

Canada seeks foreign workers

By:  Patrick Thibodeau  On: 10 Jul 2007 For: Computerworld (US online) Creator

For Colin Hansen, minister of economic development in British Columbia, Microsoft's decision last week to open a software development center in Vancouver was proof that Canada's strategy to grow its economy is working

"When the Canadian dollar was low, frankly, the U.S. was this giant vacuum cleaner" taking technology jobs out of Canada, O'Grady said. With the two currencies at near parity, "that flow has stopped," he said. Meanwhile, wages for high-tech workers can be as much as 20 percent lower than what U.S. workers are paid.

Canadians also hope that the country's quality of life adds appeal. Taxes may be higher that they are in the U.S., but Canada offers national health insurance, a good university system and much lower crime levels. For instance, there were 35 homicides last year in Toronto, which has a population of about 2.5 million. In Chicago, with about 2.9 million people, there were 452 homicides.

In addition, Canada has become far more receptive to immigration than the U.S. is, according to O'Grady. In 2006, nearly 1.3 million foreigners became permanent residents of the U.S. But Canada -- with a total population that is only about one-tenth the number of U.S. residents -- has been accepting about 250,000 new permanent residents annually, O'Grady said.

In the technology sector, such immigration is needed to fill new jobs. Paul Swinwood, president of the Information and Communications Technology Council, an Ottawa-based industry group, estimates that there are about 620,000 high-tech workers in Canada. The number of available jobs is expected to increase by about 100,000 over the next several years, Swinwood said. But Canadian universities graduate only about 15,000 students with tech skills annually, short of what is required.

Swinwood said that employees who are brought in for temporary work can usually get permanent residency. "When you have a job here in Canada, that's a pretty fair indication to the immigration department that you are of value to the country," he said. "[Canada] has been basically built by immigration. We're a country that looks at immigration as part of our natural birthright, and the supply of the growth of the country."










Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 6442   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Patrick Thibodeau Patrick Thibodeau covers SaaS and enterprise applications, outsourcing, government IT policies, data centers and IT workforce issues for Computerworld. Follow Patrick on Twitter at @DCgov , or subscribe to Pa... more

Related Content

Canadian government a tough sell, says Mitel chairman
Canadian government a tough sell, says Mitel chairmanFederal procurement practices, which allegedly favour foreign systems integrators, are helping to bury Canada's IT and telcom industries, Mitel Networks Corp. chairman Terry Matthews said Wednesday.
IT jobs coalition to lobby for immigration changes
IT jobs coalition to lobby for immigration changesA group of companies led by Bell Canada has released a report which calculates the effect of vacant technology positions on the economy. How more foreign workers could help
VIDEO: Your weekly dose of doom n' gloom
now, we here at career corner like spreading good news about the industry instead of gleefully spreading about the bad, but this week was chock-a-block enough with it industry layoffs that we thought we should share.monday: texas instruments slashes 3,400 jobs, while sprint is to give 8,000 staffers the boottuesday: ibm to lay off plant workers in the united states, with a
A new direction for CompTIA in Canada
i along with cdn have always supported comptia, an industry trade association based in a chicago. comptia's a+ certification is basically the gold standard.recently comptia founder john venator went into semi-retirement
blog comments powered by Disqus