Thank you, Mr. Chair.
First, I want to acknowledge our presence on the traditional and unceded territories of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members, for inviting me to discuss the important role that foreign workers play in Canada's labour market.
There are, as we and this committee well know, significant challenges to Canada's economy in the labour market, whether temporary or permanent. It's worth reminding the committee that 50 years ago, the ratio of worker to retiree was seven to one. It's nearly three to one now. It will approach two to one in the decades ahead if we don't welcome more newcomers, putting our infrastructure, health care and education systems at risk if we don't do so. That's just the reality. We need newcomers to grow our economy and build our country.
Thanks to immigration, we are bringing skilled workers to Canada. Immigration helps employers find the qualified workers they need to address the ongoing labour market shortage. For instance, about half of all degree holders in science, technology, engineering and mathematics in Canada came here from other countries.
Canada maintains oversight of foreign workers and their impacts on our labour market by making certain work permits employer-specific. That means the permit is associated with one occupation, wage, location and employer.
It's important for the purposes of this discussion to distinguish between the two broad permit programs that exist in Canada. The temporary foreign worker program, or TFWP, is managed by Employment and Social Development Canada and my colleague Randy Boissonnault at ESDC. It provides employer-specific work permits with labour market impact assessment requirements. It includes generally four streams, which are primarily agriculture at 40%, low-wage at 25%, high-wage at 16% and global talent at about 4%. That represents about 147,000 work permits that have been issued in 2023 so far.
The second category, a much broader one, is the international mobility program, delivered solely by IRCC, this department. It exempts employers from the LMIA requirement, which is comprised of over 100 streams. It could be professors. It could be engineers. It could be many categories that we could cover today. Only some of those are actually employer-specific. We've issued to date, under that program, about a million permits this year.
Workers under both programs make valuable contributions to our economy and are essential to employers with short-term labour needs. They deserve to be treated with dignity and respect. One need only remind oneself of what happened during COVID and the shutdown, and the crisis that imposed immediately on the economy, if people's memories are short.
Employer-specific permits enable us to conduct inspections to ensure that employers comply with regulatory conditions and employment standards legislation—for example, providing a workplace free of abuse, respecting a worker's job description and not engaging in reprisals against workers who raise concerns. Employers who break these rules can incur penalties ranging from warning letters to fines and to bans on hiring temporary foreign workers, even permanently.
The TFW program further takes into account minimum working conditions and other aspects of collective agreements, including wage requirements, which are used to prevent wage suppression for foreign workers and Canadians alike.
It should be noted that certain streams of employer-specific work permit holders receive additional support through the TFW program. For example, employers hiring under the agricultural stream and seasonal agricultural worker program must pay for a worker’s round-trip transportation from their home country to their job in Canada, then provide suitable housing that’s free of charge, on farm or off site. There are similar requirements for the low-wage streams of the TFW program.
Any instances of harassment, abuse, or exploitation under the program are absolutely unacceptable, and won't be tolerated. IRCC has introduced measures to allow workers with employer-specific permits to change jobs faster. To stem that abuse through the open work permit for vulnerable workers, we are making it easier for workers to leave abusive situations. We are exploring how to broaden temporary work permits to be sector-specific, as well.
IRCC will continue monitoring and improving its policies and programs to ensure they serve the best interests of temporary foreign workers.
Our whole-of-government approach to developing the immigration levels plan, which I tabled last week, also involves taking a closer look at temporary resident immigration levels and making sure they align with our capacity and needs, to ensure sustainable growth, today and into the future.
Thank you, and I'm happy to answer questions.