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Originally Posted by Loco101
Because of the shortage of workers for so many businesses and institutions. It's becoming quite severe in many parts of Canada including in much of Quebec.
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What would you do if the rest of the world didn't exist? Obviously the economy would adjust and find a new balance. This idea that there is no other way (TINA) but importing labor from abroad doesn't make sense.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Loco101
The difficult part for Quebec and other francophone areas of Canada is getting immigrants who can speak French upon arrival and have the skills, training and education needed. So many immigrants are coming from countries where English has been taught to a certain level but no so with French. The largest French speaking countries outside Europe are in Africa and are quite poor and much of their populations are not highly educated.
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Not true at all. France receives tens of thousands of university students from Francophone countries every year. And the country refuses many more. The largest numbers of Francophone university students come from Morocco, Algeria, and Cameroon.
There are now half a billion (half a billion!) people living in the Francophone countries of North Africa and sub-Saharan Africa, so even if a tiny % reaches to university, that's still LOTS of tentative highly educated immigrants.
Then there are also highly educated Francophones in many more places outside of Africa that you wouldn't even suspect. There exist French lycées in most countries of the world, who train tens of thousands of high school students every year, usually member of the elites of their respective countries. The Alliances Françaises network is one of the largest language education network in the world, and is booming in many places (for example there has never been so many Indian young people learning French as now, and as a consequence the number of Indian students admitted in French universities has risen a lot in recent years). Vietnam, Cambodia still have large groups of young Francophone students educated every year. Not to mention Latin America.
With a population of just 8 million, frankly the question for Québec's migration is not the size of the recruiting pool. It's large enough for a country of 8 million. The Québec government could offer visas for thousands of Francophone surgeons and doctors for example, and fill all its quotas in just a few weeks (so many Tunisian, Algerian, Moroccan trained doctors eager to migrate).