• =?UTF-8?Q?Canada=E2=80=99s_Bankers_Blame_Trudeau=E2=80=99s_Immigrat?= =

    From Lucas McCain@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 18 09:01:43 2024
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.survival, alt.politics.nationalism.white XPost: alt.politics.usa

    The big fear of the anti-White neo-Bolsheviks is populism, i.e., a
    backlash from the White demographic which is being targeted for
    demographic replacement by Third World invaders of color. Populism is a
    code word for the shrinking White majority using their vote to fight
    against the Great Replacement.

    https://www.breitbart.com/immigration/2024/01/17/canadas-elites-blame-trudeaus-immigration-bad-economy/

    Canada’s top bankers are blasting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s
    migration strategy for wrecking the nation’s economy — and for helping Canada’s political populists.

    “We’ve screwed it up,” said Beata Caranci, the Chief Economist at Canada’s TD Bank Group. “We took what we thought is a good thing [high immigration] and thought, “Well, if it’s a good thing, then more is a better thing, and now we’re realizing, no, that’s not the case.”

    Canadian CEOs are hiring Trudeau’s imported workers instead of investing
    in the workplace machinery that helps Canadians become more productive
    and wealthier, said Jean-Francois Perrault, Senior Vice-President &
    Chief Economist at Scotiabank. “We made it too easy for businesses to
    hire [foreign] folks,” instead of making it easier for Canadian
    investors and workers to grow high-tech companies, he said.

    “They lost control on immigration policy,” said Stefane Marion, the
    Chief Economist and Strategist at the National Bank of Canada.

    “We have to start thinking more intelligently” to fix the problem, said Caranci, adding:

    If they don’t start to show some courage on putting [lower] target
    numbers [for immigration], and making sure the numbers match up to the
    housing supply, they run the risk that we start to end up with populist
    views and we know what that looks like south of the border.

    The bankers spoke at a 2024 forecast organized by the Economic Club of
    Canada in Toronto.

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    The December 27 event came as Canadians are revolting against Justin Trudeau’s immigration policy, which force-fed the nation of 39 million
    with more than 1.25 million migrants in 2023.

    Trudeau’s rapid population stimulus has spiked inflation, held down
    wages, driven up housing prices, created a homeless population, reduced
    the number of Canadians able to have kids, and suppressed the
    productivity improvements that allow bigger wages and higher living
    standards. Those problems have stopped economic growth — so minimizing
    the banks’ ability to make profitable loans and investments.

    But Trudeau’s economic disaster delivered a post-2015 boon to investors
    who profited by skimming shares from the additional economic activity
    from Canada’s exploding population of workers, consumers, and renters.

    Recent polls show the dramatic turnaround in Canadian views, according
    to a January 13, hand-wringing editorial in the nation’s establishment newspaper, the Globe and Mail:

    Less than a year ago, polling by Nanos Research showed 61 per cent of
    Canadians thought that immigration levels should either be increased or
    stay the same, in keeping with a decades-old consensus that welcomes
    newcomers to this country.
    Public opinion has inverted, according to Nanos. In December, 61 per
    cent of Canadians said immigration levels should be reduced, with just
    34 per cent still believing that Canada should maintain or increase the
    number of newcomers.
    Trudeau’s government in Ottowa “needs to change course, quickly,” the editorial said.



    However, Canada’s primary conservative party — the Progressive
    Conservative Party of Canada — is also a cheerleader for more immigration.

    For example, party leader Pierre Poilievre is promising to not make
    housing shortages worse. “We need to make a link between the number of
    homes built and the number of people we invite as new Canadians,” he
    said in January. He is also promising more construction as he dangles
    more migration to win votes from Canada’s growing population of
    India-born Sikhs.

    The leading pr0-Canadian party, The People’s Party of Canada, is getting about 5 percent polling support. But if the party can reach 10 percent,
    it will likely win a critical role in Canada’s parliamentary system.


    The Canadian Experiment

    Canada’s experiment with migration is important because citizens of many nations — the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and others — are being thrown into the same elite-created whirlpool.

    For example, Ireland’s leaders and businesses are pushing to expand
    their nation’s population with immigrants from Ukraine, the Middle East,
    and Asia. The inevitable result is a massive windfall for landowners as
    the imported population inflates housing prices, lowers
    inflation-adjusted wages, and spikes public opposition:


    “I think the social contract has been completely ruptured for younger generations,” Rory Hearne, an associate professor in social policy at Maynooth University, told the New York Times for a January 15 article.

    Hearne, like many other progressives, did not blame the disaster on the
    Irish government’s pro-migration alliance with the nation’s real estate investors. Instead, he blamed the Irish government’s failure to
    undermine the investors by building government housing before imposing
    the diverse migrants on ordinary Irish. “The housing policy created this housing crisis,” he insisted.

    In the United States, President Joe Biden’s pro-migration border chief
    is also trying to emulate Canada‘s low-wage, expensive-housing policy.
    For example, in May 2023, border chief Alejandro Mayorkas told CBS:

    I spoke with my counterparts in Canada, in Spain. Their [immigration]
    systems are designed to match their [employers’] labor needs with a
    potential supply of personnel who want to work and build a better life.
    We are stuck in an antiquated system that can’t match the two. It is
    just so incredibly sad.

    Since early 2021, Mayorkas has cut many new pathways through the
    nation’s borders for at least 5 million economic migrants. The expanded migration cut Americans’ wages and drove up Americans’ housing prices,
    so shifting vast wealth from ordinary Americans to investors on Wall Street.

    Mayorkas’ inflow has also created a political crisis for Biden’s 2024 campaign. Biden’s bad polls are forcing Democrats to beg Republicans for additional money to help house and hide migrants in the run-up to the
    November 2024 election.

    Mayorkas has largely dodged questions about the pocketbook cost of his migration-based labor strategy, largely because Hill legislators and the
    media do not want to talk about migration as an economic strategy.



    The Canadian Disaster

    The Canadian bankers, however, were more willing to argue against
    Trudeau’s policy of extracting migrant workers, consumers, and renters
    from poor countries.

    Immigration helped create the housing problem, but “the government is
    moving fairly slowly on this,” said Avery Shenfeld, managing director &
    Chief Economist at ICBC Capital Markets. “The numbers just don’t add up.”

    “Hopefully, we’ll see change at some point,” said Wright.

    “I’m hoping that whoever is the government — current and future — really
    starts to tackle this head-on,” said Caranci. “We just need someone to
    take the lead on this [cutting immigration] at the end of the day.”

    Watch the video here:


    Throughout the 89-minute event, the establishment bankers unloaded on Trudeau’s migration policy.

    When asked about how Trudeau’s government has gone wrong, Caranci volunteered:

    I can go back to the immigration argument. If another government would
    take a more, you know, thoughtful approach of making sure we have proper alignment of social structure to the number of [immigrant] people and
    would have the policy in place to implement it — even if it’s slightly unpopular among some groups — [because] we have to take those steps for
    all Canadians. So that it’s something that could happen in this
    government or another government.

    “I’m frankly surprised we’ve screwed it up because we sit in such a privileged position in Canada,” said Caranci, adding:

    We don’t have 2 million people crossing our borders like they do in the
    U.S … We’re not dealing with this migrant flow across the continent
    like other countries are having to deal with …. We design our own
    policy. We put it in place, we implement it. We still screwed it up.

    “We have the most aggressive immigration policy, so yeah, there’s a good chunk of [overall] inflation [from housing spikes] that is due to government,” Shenfeld said. Rising inflation has spiked interest rates,
    which has reduced demand — and prices — for housing.

    Canada is widening its economy with immigration, but is not raising productivity, said Craig Wright, Senior Vice President and Chief
    Economist at Canada’s largest bank, RBC, or the Royal Bank of Canada.

    The economy’s speed limit is labor force growth plus productivity. We’ve heard all about how poor our productivity [growth] is, so our only game
    in town — our [economic] growth strategy if we had one — would be on
    labor force: Getting more people in the [labor] market. Last year, all
    the growth in labor force came from immigration. By 2035-ish, 2035, all
    the growth in population will come from immigration. So we need to
    continue to keep immigration very strong … but we have do a better job
    of tying them in the economy and getting the lift to the productivity side.

    But productivity is boosted by high-tech investments, not migration,
    said Shenfeld:

    It would be nice to be able to buy a Canadian phone or, you know, a
    Canadian tech product, and we don’t do enough of that. It’s those industries that actually generate the big productivity gains … that
    shows up in productivity numbers because you’re improving the output per worker. We don’t do enough of that.



    Canada is losing productivity because it ignores its oil and gas sector,
    and because there is too little investment in cutting-edge technology,
    said Marion. “We need to realign, to optimize, what we can do in this
    country with productivity — we have all the tools to do it,” he added.

    “We’ve fallen into a population trap” where the expanding population
    eats up the money needed to improve technology and productivity, said
    Marion. He explained:

    A population trap is defined where an increase in living standards is no
    longer possible because you don’t have enough savings to stabilize your capital to labor ratio. For the first time in Canadian history in 2023,
    our capital/labor ratio declined. That’s a population trap.
    Historically, it’s normally associated with emerging markets [such as Africa]. We’re the only OECD country that’s ever experienced this …
    [and] it is undermining living standards.


    If the government wants to raise productivity, it should accept labor shortages, Caranci said. Government should “be careful of having an ear
    [for] the sympathies of corporations who are complaining that they’re
    having trouble finding workers,” she said, adding:

    If you look at what has happened in retail and accomodation, for
    example, two sectors that have had a lot of difficulty during the
    pandemic. [They] wanted to argue to bring in a lot of low-skilled
    workers. Well, those are two sectors that have been releasing workers
    for the last three to four months consistently. So if you tailor a
    policy to the moment, it makes no sense because [the economy is]
    cyclical and those those [economic] markers start to move on you.



    Of course, there’s going to be [labor] shortages in construction and
    other areas. Construction, by the way, is one of the areas that has the
    worst productivity, like people still use hammers and nails … So I’ll
    just say like, there can be a lot of [productivity] improvements there.

    Migration is pushing Canadians into smaller living spaces, said Wright: “People are getting pushed out of the housing market and into the rental market.” Multiple studies show that birth rates decline when couples
    cannot buy houses.

    “Canada’s birth rate has dropped off a cliff (and it’s likely because nobody can afford housing),” Canada’s National Post newspaper noted in October 2023.


    Programs that import supposedly temporary migrants also worsen housing shortages and inflation, said Shenfeld. “Rents are very expensive … That’s tied to rapid immigration, not just permanent residents, but
    hundreds of thousands of students every year — temporary foreign
    workers,” he said.

    The huge inflow of supposedly temporary students and workers —
    regardless of skills — is driven by the economic interests of colleges
    and universities, said Shenfeld. “It’s just really a tuition-making
    machine … I do think we have to dial this down.”

    If the government does not have the nerve to correct its failure, Canada
    may see a populist upsurge, Caranci warned:

    We need courage on immigration policy … I think Canadians are very, very
    open to immigration. This is not a discussion about being
    anti-immigration. This is a discussion about the numbers and the right
    numbers. And if they don’t start to show some courage on putting [lower] target numbers, and making sure the numbers match up to the housing
    supply, they run the risk that we start to end up with populist views
    and we know what that looks like south of the border. So they really
    need to start thinking through what is the appropriate amount of foreign [workers] to bring in.

    “So we have to start thinking more intelligently and have a bit more
    courage on what we’re doing… There actually needs to be some math behind what we’re doing and there’s not [now],” Caranci noted.

    “Even if it’s slightly unpopular among some groups [because] we have to take those steps for all Canadians,” Caranci concluded.




    --
    You voted for student loan forgiveness. You got demographic replacement
    and World War 3.

    "Title 8, U.S.C. § 1324(a) defines several distinct offenses related to aliens. Subsection 1324(a)(1)(i)-(v) prohibits alien smuggling, domestic transportation of unauthorized aliens, concealing or harboring
    unauthorized aliens, encouraging or inducing unauthorized aliens to
    enter the United States, and engaging in a conspiracy or aiding and
    abetting any of the preceding acts. Subsection 1324(a)(2) prohibits
    bringing or attempting to bring unauthorized aliens to the United States
    in any manner whatsoever, even at a designated port of entry. Subsection 1324(a)(3)."

    “Western values mean three things: migration, LGBTQ, and war." Viktor Orban

    https://www.globalgulag.us

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