What fields are Canadians going to work in after the pandemic?

Amanda Ryan, who lives in New Brunswick, had her own cleaning business until last year, when she decided to become a realtor.

“I had a cleaning business for a long time, and my body was starting to feel the effects of constant cleaning,” says Ryan, a mother of two.

A year after changing careers, Ryan says the work has proven challenging, but enjoyable. And more rewarding.

Such career changes come amid a tightening labor market, which leads to shortages in the industries that workers have left. Overall, Canada’s unemployment rate remains at 4.9 percent, the lowest since 1970.

Examination of the data also shows long-term changes in the country’s labor market, caused by demographic shifts that have occurred over the decades. The data show a sharp shift toward certain sectors, such as government, educational services and real estate, and away from others, such as catering, agriculture and construction.

Labor economist Fabian Lange of McGill University in Montreal says many workers seem to be moving up the “job ladder” toward industries with better compensation and benefits, a phenomenon he is now documenting in the U.S.

Amid such a tight labor market, offered hourly wages have risen substantially in some sectors, such as technical and information services, while in other areas, such as manufacturing, food service and retail, they continue to lag.

 

Canadian province of Saskatchewan

Canadian province of Saskatchewan seeks special immigration independence

At the beginning of August 2022, the Saskatchewan government issued a statement that it was seeking greater control over its immigration system.

The announcement came on the same day that Saskatchewan Immigration Minister Jeremy Harrison attended a meeting in New Brunswick with other Canadian immigration ministers, including his federal counterpart Sean Fraser.

The most important outcome of the meeting was the ministers’ agreement to develop a multi-year PNP allocation plan by March 31, 2023. This would allow each province and territory to allocate PNP funds over three years, which would help them plan ahead to support their economic development goals.

A number of provinces say such efforts are still not enough to promote local economic development.

Saskatchewan is asking for a new bilateral immigration agreement with the federal government, similar to the one Quebec has. Because of its unique French-speakingness in Canada, the province of Quebec has the most control over the immigration system of all ten Canadian provinces and three territories. Under the Canada-Quebec Agreement signed in 1991, the province has the power to set its own levels of immigration, to select all economic class immigrants, to control the admission of temporary residents, and to have a say over classes of families and refugees.

Saskatchewan is currently allocating 6,000 principal applicants for 2022, but the province believes that 13,000 places would be a fair number, as it is Saskatchewan’s proportionate share of all immigration to Canada.