Just to put it into perspective, the economic recovery from COVID-19 in Canada has been as strong as in any developed nation in the world. Before the omicron variant landed in our communities, we saw 107% of the jobs lost during the pandemic recovered. GDP had exceeded prepandemic levels, and our labour force participation rate had hit an all-time high.
That said, we still had, at the end of the year, about 900,000 job vacancies in the Canadian economy. We need to adopt policies that will foster economic growth, and immigration is going to help drive the growth we need.
The immigration levels plan that I tabled yesterday has a strong economic focus, and it's designed to help ensure that we can get as many workers here as our system allows to fill those gaps in the labour force. We're talking about workers in our health care sector and our transportation sector. Go down any main street and talk to a restaurant owner, or go to a machine shop to see if they have talent on the shop floor to fill the orders that they otherwise could fill.
Immigration is going to play a major role, and with yesterday's levels plan that I tabled, we now have one of the strongest tools that we've ever had in our history to get workers here on a permanent basis. However, this only scratches the surface, because we also have the opportunity to use our demand-driven temporary immigration programs to get workers here more quickly who might not be needed in the long term as permanent residents.
The combined impact of the levels plan with our temporary programs is going to give us the tools we need to leverage immigration to get workers here to fill those jobs where business owners can't find Canadians in their own community to fill the jobs they need to maximize the economic growth potential.
I'll leave my answer there, but I think you can appreciate, Madam Chair, that I could spend several hours on this subject.