Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Report finds 1 in 5 newcomers leave Canada within 25 years, calls for retention plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Nov, 2024 11:49 AM
  • Report finds 1 in 5 newcomers leave Canada within 25 years, calls for retention plan

One in five immigrants who come to Canada ultimately leave the country within 25 years, with about one-third of those people moving on within the first five years. 

The findings come from a report by the Institute for Canadian Citizenship and the Conference Board of Canada, which looked at the issue of onward migration for the second time. 

The report is based on data collected up to the end of 2020. It finds that over the previous 30 years, the rate of immigrants leaving Canada had been on an upward trajectory. 

"The number of immigrants leaving Canada reached an all-time high in 2020. Despite extreme pandemic travel restrictions, immigrants found ways to leave the country in record numbers and despite multiple opportunities to return, they chose not to," said Daniel Bernhard, CEO of the Institute for Canadian Citizenship. 

To come up with the data, the study combined information on immigration rates from Statistics Canada with tax filing information. They consider someone an onward migrant if there was no T-1 family file for two years, and then never again up until 2021.

The report found that economic immigrants are the most likely to leave Canada and refugees are the least likely to leave. Some of those who left returned to their country of origin, while others moved on to a new third country.

"The most sobering implication is the two categories of immigrants Canada prioritizes most — those are economic immigrants and francophones — those are actually the least likely to make Canada their forever home," Bernhard said. 

Nearly half of onward migrants since 1982 were economic immigrants: people who applied for permanent residency and it was granted based on their possession of skills that are valued in the labour market. 

The Institute for Canadian Citizenship is calling on the federal government to develop strategies on how to better retain immigrants, especially in the first five years. 

"If you remain optimistic about the prospects of that investment, you're very likely to continue contributing your talent and energy to Canada's success. So this is an all-of-Canada effort," Bernhard said. 

"Immigrants are increasingly disappearing from the country, but sadly, our shortages in housing, in the housing workforce, in early childhood education and in health care, those needs are not disappearing."

The report focuses on hard numbers, but based on public opinion research the institute has conducted, Bernhard said affordability played a factor in people's decisions to leave. 

Immigration Minister Marc Miller's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

Francophone immigrants are more likely to leave than their English peers, with the report finding a 35 per cent long-term onward migration rate.

The highest proportion of people leaving the country had settled in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver — while smaller cities like Calgary, Halifax and Moncton saw greater immigrant retention. 

MORE National ARTICLES

2 die in Merritt plane crash

2 die in Merritt plane crash
Police say a pilot and passenger are dead after an amateur-built plane crashed about two kilometres north of the Merritt airport last night.  R-C-M-P describe the two-seat aircraft as being "homebuilt" and "amphibious."

2 die in Merritt plane crash

Senior dies in motorcycle crash

Senior dies in motorcycle crash
A 71-year-old man is dead after a motorcycle crash in Twin Bays. R-C-M-P say it happened on Saturday on Highway 3-A.

Senior dies in motorcycle crash

Burnaby Hospital to expedite lab results

Burnaby Hospital to expedite lab results
Burnaby's hospital is the first in the Fraser Health region to get a new system aimed at speeding up lab results. The 1.5-million-dollar Beckman Autoline D-x-A five-thousand system has a conveyor for moving test tubes between analyzers.

Burnaby Hospital to expedite lab results

Man charged after three-year-old struck and killed in Edmonton crosswalk

Man charged after three-year-old struck and killed in Edmonton crosswalk
A man is facing charges after a three-year-old boy was killed in Edmonton when a pickup truck hit him along with his mother and sister. The crash happened in the southwest neighbourhood of Allard on June 27.

Man charged after three-year-old struck and killed in Edmonton crosswalk

Coast Guard fines owner $13,500 after failure to remove 'hazardous' vessel

Coast Guard fines owner $13,500 after failure to remove 'hazardous' vessel
A British Columbia boat owner has been fined $13,500 after failing to remove the partially sunken vessel from a bay along the coast of Vancouver Island. Fisheries and Oceans Canada says the owner was given a deadline last March to remove the 12-metre fishing vessel from the waters near Gold River on the west coast of Vancouver Island.

Coast Guard fines owner $13,500 after failure to remove 'hazardous' vessel

Mounties in Prince George issue warning over 'hit man' scam

Mounties in Prince George issue warning over 'hit man' scam
Police in British Columbia are warning the public about what they describe as a "hit man" scam. Prince George RCMP say the fraud scheme involves victims who receive texts or emails with threatening messages saying the sender is being sent to kill them. 

Mounties in Prince George issue warning over 'hit man' scam