Thank you very much for that question. I am grateful to be able to say what I think, which is yes. I wrote that sentence yesterday, that Canada is a world leader, and then I added, using track changes, “but this is at risk”. I think you have identified features of that risk.
The reason we were a world leader was that we abandoned racial considerations when admitting immigrants, but—and I've been writing about this a lot—some of the most recent changes, in fact—and I don't even know how to say this—are nearly completely crazy to me. We have a temporary labour migration program that is effectively modelled on the German system. We know historically what happened to the German system of guest workers. Those people ended up marginalized and isolated at the margins of German society. That's a lesson right there, and for whatever reason, we're not understanding, we're not learning that lesson. In fact, what we're doing is the government has created a visa overstayer problem.
Simply put, that is evidence that we are no longer the world leader. If we're going to regain that status, we need to look inward, not simply at the economic considerations of immigration, which, in my view, is what the government has been doing, but at the general contribution. I'm not the only one on this committee who thinks we need to have a discussion about the overall contribution that immigrants make. It goes nearly without saying that immigrants should not simply be measured in terms of their economic value or their economic cost.