Immigration In Canada
6 Pages 1500 Words
Immigration
Immigration is a worldwide phenomenon. Canada is an increasingly
ethnically diverse country. Canada’s reflection of ethnic diversity is due to the
increasing flow of immigration. The vast majority of Canadians are born in
Canada, and most of them are from European descent.
Close to, half of all immigrants that came to Canada between 1991 and
1996 reveal a first language other than French or English. During this time,
many immigrants came from Asia and the Middle East. It’s been reported
that 29 percent of Canadians have more than one ethnic origin. Native
peoples make up about 3 percent and blacks about 2 percent of the
population.
Canada has an open immigration program that accepts newcomers
approximately from every other country in the world. The estimated population
in 2002 was 31,902,268.
Immigration is important in maintaining Canada’s population. The
current childbearing generation has smaller families than earlier generations:
the fertility rate is 1.6, less than the population replacement rate of 2.1. At
the same time, older people are living longer, so that the average age of the
population is higher. In 2002, Canada’s rate of natural increase was 0.36
percent, resulting from a birth rate of 11.1 per 1,000 persons and a death rate
of 7.5 per 1,000. There is a downward trend in the birth index—in 1981, it was
15.3—and the likely result will be zero growth or population loss. For this
reason the Canadian government in the 1980’s decided to balance the low
birth rate by allowing more immigration into the country.
The way immigrants adjust to life in Canada has much to do with the
reason why they came here. Most modern immigrants are motivated to
relocate far from their homelands by the desire to improve their and their
family’s lives. Such people are known as economic immigrants. They r...