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Showing posts from May, 2019

Express Entry 2019 periodical Report: more than 40,000 invitation to apply for Canadian permanent residence

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invitations to apply for long-term residence issue to candidate in Canada’s state Entry arrangement. This is a 5,800 augment from 2014’s first district that broken at 17,500 invitations issued. The year 2018 set an all-time record of 89,800 Invitations to Apply (ITAs) issued. This is the maximum numeral of invitations issued for any one year since state opening was introduced in 2013. This year is possible to be an even bigger year based on Canada’s  three-year migration levels plan. The plan outline rising annual pass targets for the years ahead, culminating in 750,000 admissions in 2021. The rising admission targets for 2019 and 2020 could mean the total number of invitations issued in 2019 may go beyond the  ITA  record set in 2018. The Canadian government utilizes the Express Entry system to select permanent immigration candidates from a pool of possible candidates who are eligible under one of the central High Skilled financial immigration program — the  central Ski

skilled immigration Canada

The Government of Canada invited 500 Federal Skilled Trades Class candidates with Comprehensive Ranking Scores as low as 332 to apply for Canadian permanent residence in a new Express Entry

Canada saw largest employment gain on record

Canada had a standard April when it comes to profession, posting the largest one month gain in net jobs on record. Profession rose by 107,000 in April, with notable gains in Ontario, Quebec, Alberta, and Prince Edward Island. The unexpected jump in employment far surpassed the projected increase of around 10,000 net jobs and helped push Canada’s unemployment rate to 5.7 percent, down slightly from 5.8 in March. From the net new jobs in April, 73,000 were full-time and the majority of the gains — 84,000 — occurred in the private sector. On a year-over-year basis, employment grew by 426,000, of which 248,000 was full-time. Statistics Canada reported that employment rose for youths aged 15 to 24, people aged 55 and older, and women in the core working ages of 25 to 54. “Wow. This was by and large a solid report,” Brian DePratto, senior economist with the Toronto Dominion Bank, wrote in an update. “Nearly every indicator of quality came in strong this month: the best-ever gain came w

immigration express entry consultant

Canadians will head to the polls in October to elect a new central government, which could bring changes to Canada’s current immigration policies.  Canada’s three major political parties — the governing Liberals, the traditional Party of Canada and the New Democratic Party (NDP) — are all on the record as being in favour of economic immigration, but there are differences in their approach to the issue that could have an impact on immigration policy. Under the Liberals, Canada’s immigration policies have taken a direction that puts them in increasingly stark contrast to the current policies of the United States and many European countries. Chief among their policies was the adoption of  increased immigration targets  that would see Canada welcome more than one million new permanent residents by the end of 2021 and push the country’s immigration rate to nearly one per cent of its population. True to their name, they have also liberalized immigration policy to  reduce the tim