Jamaicans top the number of migrants heading to Canada from Caribbean
Some 21,215 Jamaicans have acquired permanent resident status in the North American country, accounting for 45 per cent of the 47,265 Caricom nationals who have immigrated there since 2015.
Haiti followed with 12,885 nationals immigrating, Guyana 2,605; Trinidad and Tobago 2,525; St Vincent and the Grenadines 2,310; St Lucia 1,970; Barbados 985; The Bahamas 845; Grenada 615; Antigua 455; Belize 380; Dominica 215; St Kitts and Nevis 185; while Suriname accounted for 55.
The IRCC data, requested by the Jamaica Observer, showed that in 2015, 3,415 Jamaicans packed for Canada; 3,560 left in 2016; 3,830 in 2017; 3,875 in 2018; 3,980 in 2019, 2,030 in 2020; and 525 between January and March 2021.
It is believed that economic challenges, and the country's high crime rate, are the push factors behind the steady exodus.
The IRCC data showed that most Jamaicans immigrated through sponsorship from a spouse or partner under the Federal Skills Trade Program or the Federal Skilled Worker Program.
The Federal Skilled Worker Program is for skilled workers with foreign work experience who want to immigrate to Canada permanently. At the same time, the Federal Skilled Trades Program (Express Entry) caters to skilled workers who want to become permanent residents being qualified in a skilled trade.
Since 2015, most Jamaicans (785) invited to apply to provinces under the country's Federal Skilled Trades Program (Express Entry) acquired permanent resident status in New Brunswick, one of the least populated provinces country. Vancouver and Ontario accounted for the lowest.
Immigration consultant Renee Braham-Gordon singled out health-care and economic stability as the two most common reasons for Jamaicans resettling in Canada.
The Jamaican, who manages the director of MEIA Immigration Consulting Inc, explained that the country offers universal health care to citizens and permanent residents through a public health insurance scheme. With it, the two groups do not have to pay for most healthcare services.
Braham-Gordon, who lives and operates out of Canada, also noted that education and cultural diversity are other factors that account for relocation.
“Canada needs immigrants. They need people to work, and people are willing to come and do that. There is always employment here. It may not be in the field that you want, but employment is always here. We're the second-largest country in the world by landmass, and the government needs people to occupy and work in these different areas and spaces.
“So, even though the population is now estimated at 37.5 million, people are needed. When you go to the countrysides, you understand how much human capital is needed. We need people to farm. We need people for construction and so much more. At one point, they were paying people to move to certain areas in the country,” Braham-Gordon said in an interview last week.
“People come here also to secure their kid's future because here, where education is concerned, what an international student will pay for tuition is sometimes three, four or five times [more] than what a domestic student will pay. So to give their children that opportunity persons migrate,” she added.
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