2008 the ontario labour market and internationally trained immigrants
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The Ontario Labour Market and ITIs
July 14, 2008
Funded by the Government of Ontario, Ministry of Citizenship & Immigration
Presented by: Nikhat Rasheed, Employment Support Expert
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Agenda
• Overview of the Ontario labour market• Demand for labour• Immigrant Characteristics• Integration?• Profession/ Trade-specific Issues• Advising Issues
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Labour Markets and JobsWhat is a labour market?
A labour market is a place where individuals exchange their labour for compensation. Labour markets are identified and defined by a combination of the following factors, including the following:
– Geography,– Education and/or technical background required,– Experience required by the job,– Licensing or certification requirements,– Occupational membership, and– Industry
Why are jobs changing?– Demographics– Economic growth– Technology– Consumer behavior
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Demographic Shifts
Declining birth rate + Growing seniors population = Reduced Labour Force Growth (mitigated by immigration)
Note: According to Statistics Canada, as early as 2015 a fertility rate of 1.5 children per woman - which is below the population-replacement level - will mean that the number of Canadians older than 65 will surpass the number younger than 15.
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Projected RetirementOur retirement rates are highest within the primary sector (manufacturing, agriculture) and not in professional fields, with some exceptions like nursing.
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Job Creation Trends
Projected job creation is in professional and technical occupations, healthcare and management.
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Emerging JobsEmerging occupations are those that require knowledge, skills and abilities not defined by occupations in current occupational coding structures (e.g. National Occupational Classification Index). Basically, these are new occupations in the workforce - new titles with new skills. HRSD identifies:
– aerospace
– biotechnology in: agriculture; forestry; fishing; pharmaceuticals
– call centres
– environment
– gaming
– multimedia
– telehealth
– tele-learning
Note: Emerging fields are usually within knowledge intensive areas requiring advanced levels of education and innovation.
www.librariansmatter.com
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Educational Backgrounds NeededProjected job growth and prospects will be best for:
22% will require a university degree.
29% will require extensive post-secondary but less than university degree.
29% will require high school and/or occupation-specific training.
Specialist Physicians
Electronic Service Technicians (Household and Business Equipment)
Customer Service, Information and Related Clerks
General Practitioners and Family Physicians
Respiratory Therapists, Clinical Perfusionists and Cardio-Pulmonary Technologists Dental Assistants
Dentists Medical Radiation Technologists
Retail Salespersons and Sales Clerks
Optometrists
Ambulance Attendants and Other Paramedical Occupations Food and Beverage Servers
Pharmacists Paralegal and Related Occupations Truck Drivers
Audiologists and Speech-Language Pathologists Chefs Physiotherapists Hairstylists and Barbers
Occupational Therapists Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Mechanics
Registered Nurses
Automotive Service Technicians, Truck Mechanics and Mechanical Repairers
Secondary School Teachers Elementary School and Kindergarten Teachers Source: www.ontariojobfutures.com Social Workers 8
Demand for Labour
Predicted shortages due to retirements in many sectors – especially primary and service (some professional fields).
Economic growth and technological change likely to fuel demand for university-educated professionals. Trades and support professions shortages identified (college-educated/apprenticeships).
Immigration the only source of work-force growth by 2017, as there will be more current workers leaving the labour pool than entering it.
If so, what kind of immigrants do we need? And what kind of immigrants are we bringing in?
www.canadian-immigration.org
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Immigrant Characteristics
Selected characteristics of
immigrants Canada Toronto Vancouver Montréal Calgary
Ottawa-Gatineau
Other CMAs
%
Admission class
Family class immigrants
26.9 26.7 27.2 21.1 28.6 27.8 29.3
Economic class immigrants
66.7 69.9 67.8 73 62.4 62.4 55.4
Principal applicants in the economic class immigrants
37.5 38.9 34.7 47.4 32 37 31.4
Spouse and dependents in the economic class immigrants
29.2 31 33.1 25.6 30.4 25.4 24
Refugees 6 3.3 4 5.5 8.6 9.8 15.2
Immigration Facts
225,000 arrive annually and 60% (approx.135,000) come to Ontario.
2/3rds are in economic class.
20% approx. are in regulated professions.
60-70% of all regulated professionals to Ontario are engineers, technicians and technologists; health, teaching , accounting and social work make up the other major groups.
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Immigrant Characteristics
Selected characteristics of immigrants
Canada Toronto Vancouver Montréal Calgary Ottawa-
Gatineau Other CMAs
Other education characteristics
Newcomers with at least one foreign credential
76 76.7 71.8 83.3 73.4 81 70.6
Newcomers who tried to get at least one credential checked
39 35.2 31.8 54.1 34.2 37.8 46.9
Plan to obtain further training 65.9 64.9 70.5 66.5 73.3 65.1 66.3
Ease of accessing services
Difficulties accessing education and training
39.6 40.8 45.1 39.9 44.5 48.4 26.7
Difficulties entering the labour market
69.9 74.1 72.9 75.8 58.1 75.4 58.4
Immigration Facts
Our immigration system was/is skewed towards professionals with high levels of education and experience.
Immigrants must demonstrate language proficiency of IELTS 7.0.
ON PNP Pilot (May 2007) includes skilled trades.
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Integration?Major occupation groups of immigrants before and after arriving in Canada, 2001
Occupation groups
Men Women
Before arriving After arriving Before arriving After arriving
Number
Immigrants with occupations before and after arriving in Canada 39,700 43,800 22,300 28,300
%
Management occupations 12.7 4.4 8 2.6
Occupations in business, finance and administration 8.1 9.8 25.3 17.9
Natural and applied sciences and related occupations 38.6 18.8 16.8 6.8
Health occupations 3.5 1.8 10 4.2
Occupations in social science, education, government service and religion 7.3 4.8 17.6 6.2
Occupations in art, culture, recreation and sport 1.8 1.0E 3.8 1.8E
Sales and service occupations 10.2 24.9 12.1 37.3
Trades, transport and equipment operators and related occupations 9.9 10.4 0.7E 2.7
Occupations unique to primary industry 3.6 1.8 1.3E 2.6
Occupations unique to processing, manufacturing and utilities 4.1 22.3 4.4 17.9
Source: Longitudinal Survey of Immigrants to Canada, 2001.
Note: Proportion of immigrants in management, business, finance, natural and applied science, health, social service, art – considered ‘professional’ occupations have reduced considerably for both men and women. Service, sales, trades, primary and manufacturing occupations have increased exponentially.
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Professions and Trades
80% of the Canadian workforce is employed in non-regulated occupations/20% in regulated occupations requiring licensing, certification or registration. There are two main types of regulated occupations in Canada: Regulated professions & Apprenticeable trades.
Regulated professions (38 in Ontario of which 22 are health) usually require several years of university or college education, practical experience under the supervision of a licensed worker in the chosen profession, and the successful completion of a licensure examination. They receive a license to practice.
Apprenticeable trades (certification for 28 is mandatory, 34 voluntary) usually require the completion of a period of apprenticeship training on the job by a licensed supervisor, some specialized college education courses, and the successful completion of a certification examination. They receive a “Certificate of Qualification”
“What is a regulated profession?
In Ontario, some professions set their own standards of practice. These are called regulated professions. They set standards to protect the public.”
~ Ministry of Citizenship and Immigration
Source: www.workdestinations.org 13
Regulated Professions
• Regulation vs. Self-Regulation
• Need for regulation vs. Public interest argument
• Challenges of self-regulation from an ITI perspective
• Fair Access to Regulated Professions Act & Office of Fairness Commissioner
• The OFC reports released June 26 and July 3, 2008
• NOC Index (occupational classification by skills, education needed)
• Licensing – certification – registration: are there any differences in the terms?
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NOC Index: skills vs. occupations?
NOC Index Occupational Example Licensure Type
Management Engineering Manager Not specific (usually P.Eng)
Skill Level A: requires university
[Professions]
Construction Engineer
---------------------------------Engineer in Training orEngineering Professional
Require license Professional Engineer *----------------------------------80% of jobs in engineering do not require licensing
Skill Level B: require college diploma, certificate or apprenticeship (skill level reduces)[Support Professions][Skilled Trades]
Technicians and Technologists
---------------------------------Electrician (construction and maintenance)
Require certification Certified Engineering Technologist------------------------------------Require certification Electrician
Skill Level C: require high school or occupation-specific training
[Skilled Trades]
Heavy Equipment Operator May require certification or registration or notMobile crane operator
Skill Level D: on-the-job training
[Semi-skilled]
Public works and other labourers'
No formal certification
Schematic prepared by Nikhat Rasheed – For illustration purposes only.
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NOC Index: skills vs. occupations?NOC Index Occupational Example Licensure Type
Management Health Managers Not specific (depends)
Skill Level A: requires university
[Professions][Allied Health Professions]
Physicians and Dentists----------------------------------Registered Nurses, Pharmacists
License------------------------------------RegistrationPharmacist
Skill Level B: require college diploma, certificate or apprenticeship (skill level reduces)
[Allied Health Professions][Allied Health Aides]
Pharmacy Technician-----------------------------------Medical Lab TechniciansPersonal support workers (college certificate)
CertificationCertified Pharmacy Technician
Medical Lab TechnicianPersonal Support Worker
Skill Level C: require high school or occupation-specific training
[Allied Health Aides]
Health care aides None
Skill Level D: on-the-job training
[Semi-skilled]
None None
Schematic prepared by Nikhat Rasheed – For illustration purposes only.
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Profession-specific IssuesIn health professions – licensing (accreditation, exams, simulations, changes to requirements e.g. nursing) and specific competencies (occupation-specific language, occupational teams) may be key barriers to employment.
In engineering and applied sciences licensing is not a major problem as 80% of jobs don’t require it. However, for those going for licensing, 60-70% get educational accreditation but experience requirement is an issue. Key barriers to employment are employer resistance and workplace communications.
In teaching, both certification and employment are problematic. In addition, Ontario certifies around 10,000 teachers/year and employs only 2,500 (including ITIs) and recommendations by school boards is important to get a job.
Getting Employed in a Regulated Profession
Accrediting education (credential assessment/)
Supplementary information e.g. police check)
Licensing or certification examinations
Experience and/competency assessments
Achieving licensure
Employment issues
Employment
Schematic prepared by Nikhat Rasheed – For illustration purposes only.17
Trades-specific Issues
• There has historically been limited research into the trades areas.
• Predicted shortages in trades.
• Requires different skill set e.g. engineers cannot lay cables, construction workers cannot design.
• Due to points system the traditional recruitment has been towards professions; some changes have been made especially to PNP.
www.janetrades.com
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Advising Issues
• Many professionals are becoming downwardly mobile under the notion of ‘alternative’ employment pathways. We need to ensure that we are up-skilling not down-skilling people.
• We are in the business of enhancing ITI capacities to achieve their goals.
• Successful advising will result in informed decision making, leading to the fulfillment of ITI goals.
users.ipfw.edu/Blumenth/Advising/Cartoon.jpg
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For more information, refer to the resource list provided.
Contact details
Nikhat Rasheed
Employment Support Expert
416-351-7531 ext. 3600
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