2014-05-10
Denise Helly, Eugénie Depatie-Pelletier, and Adrienne Gibson
Western States have developed a range of national and bilateral programs to identify sectoral labour shortages and admit just-in-time foreign workers under temporary rather than permanent legal status. Statistics on occupations filled between 2004 and 2009 by guestworkers in Canada (Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta and British Columbia) show that some labour shortages addressed by the presence of guestworkers were less acute than others. Moreover, researchers have recently identified that the presence of guestworkers in Canada have or would put a significant downward pressure on the wages and work conditions of certain categories of local workers. This downward pressure has been explained, in particular, by the restrictions on rights and freedoms of certain groups of guestworkers. In order to minimize the negative economic impact of guestworkers programs while maximizing their economic benefits, states need to restructure temporary work regimes as 2-step immigration programs facilitating “just-in-time” integration and circular migration.
International CRIMT Conference
Montreal
40
General relevance - all sectors
Policy analysis, Current Policy, and Numbers of migrant workers
Policymakers and Researchers
Ontario, Alberta, Manitoba, Quebec, British Columbia, and National relevance
English