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CANADA: The Shifting Global Economic Order and its Impact on Corporate Immigration - A Canadian Perspective

11/4/2011

1 Comment

 
by Kenneth Ing, ABIL Lawyer
Porta Immigration

INTRODUCTION

The past decade has seen significant changes to the global economy, including the continued rise of emerging economic powers--Brazil, India, China, and Russia. This paper will examine how economic changes in these “BRIC countries” have affected their corporate immigration policies from the government perspective. Furthermore, it will examine the laws and regulations of Canada: a stable, industrialized nation that has seen its own challenges and opportunities over the years with respect to corporate immigration policies.

BRIC COUNTRIES

The following are some observations of the BRIC countries, from a Canadian perspective, so far as changes in immigration policies against the background changes in the global economy.

China
China is divided into 23 provinces, five autonomous regions and four municipalities. Its immigration laws are largely carried out by provincial, regional, and municipal agencies, with oversight by several state ministries. There are significant variations in each locality’s immigration structure, so a foreign national’s destination in China will determine the relevant regional and local authorities involved and the immigration requirements and process. While the nature of the Chinese government system makes it difficult to anticipate changes in policy, a 2010 report by the Xinhua news agency suggests that China is currently looking to radically overhaul its immigration policy, and one of the main purposes of this is to attract foreign skilled workers, professionals, and investors. If these changes come to fruition, this would signal a willingness to adapt to changing global economic conditions similar to India and Russia.

India
The Indian government has made changes to its immigration policies to take into account changing global economic conditions. The Indian Ministry of Home Affairs uses a system where workers can apply for a Business Visa (“B” visa) or Employment Visa (“E” visa), and recently eliminated the old “1% quota rule” for all employment visa applications to a maximum of 20 foreign nationals per company. Changes to the visa rules, specifically with the “E” visa, have directly targeted highly skilled or professional workers, who must demonstrate that they will be paid a salary to at least $25,000 per year, in addition to meeting the other immigration rules.

Russia
Similar to China and India, Russia has made substantial changes to its immigration policies in order to reflect global economic shifts. The introduction of a Highly Skilled Worker category allows for “a significantly faster and simpler immigration process for foreign nationals who are paid at least US$65,000 a year in Russia” employed by Russian commercial companies, scientific, educational and medical institutions that have state accreditation, and branches of foreign legal entities. This requirement was lowered to roughly US$32,500 a year for scientists and teachers who meet certain criteria, including having been invited by the Russian government to work in that country and participate in research and/or teaching in state higher education institutions, academies. Moreover, these new rules have reduced or in some cases eliminated migration registration requirements for short stays.

Brazil
After examining the other BRIC countries, it would appear that Brazil has done the least, on a comparative basis, to implement more efficient corporate immigration policies for the purpose of facilitating foreign highly skilled workers. Attaining a work visa in Brazil is a three-step process that can take up to a year to complete, and goes through both national and local bureaucratic structures. This is especially problematic, considering that the lack of skilled workers could prove to be a key obstacle to achieving long-term growth in Brazil. The Economist recently noted that there is a specific shortage of PhD-level workers there. While it is true that external factors, such as a stagnant economy in the latter half of the 20th Century and critically important language skills in Portuguese, have contributed to Brazil’s isolation with respect to foreign workers, the seemingly archaic, confusing, and heavily bureaucratic immigration policies for skilled workers have not helped to alleviate these issues.

CANADA

In recent years, over 150,000 foreign workers each year enter Canada to work temporarily in jobs that help Canadian employers address skill shortages.

In general, Canada has developed its laws, regulations and rules in order to facilitate the temporary entry into Canada for foreign nationals who are business persons and from selected categories of workers.

Canada has entered into treaties with a number of countries, in order to expand trade, and provide individuals with access to each other’s country to sell, provide goods or services or trade and invest.

Working Temporarily Without A Work Permit

A foreign national may not need a work permit he or she falls into one of the following categories:
  • Athletes and coaches
  • Aviation accident or incident investigators
  • Business visitors
  • Civil aviation inspectors
  • Clergy
  • Convention organizers
  • Crew members
  • Emergency service providers
  • Examiners and evaluators
  • Expert witnesses or investigators
  • Family members of foreign representatives
  • Foreign government officers
  • Foreign representatives
  • Health-care students
  • Judges, referees and similar officials
  • Military personnel
  • News reporters, film and media crews
  • Performing artists
  • Public speakers
  • Students working on campus
Business Visitors

Business visitors do not need a work permit. A business visitor is someone who comes to Canada to engage in international business activities without directly entering the Canadian labour market.

A foreign national may qualify as a business visitor if he or she plans to visit Canada temporarily to look for new business opportunities, to invest or to advance existing business relationships.

Business visitors usually stay in Canada for a few days or a few weeks. To be considered a business visitor, a foreign national must establish that:
  • he or she intends to stay for less than six months and does not plan to enter the Canadian labour market
  • his or her main place of business and source of income is located outside Canada
  • profits from his or her business will accrue outside Canada
  • he or she meets the basic entry requirements.  These include:
    • having a valid travel document, such as a passport
    • having sufficient funds for his or her stay
    • plan to leave Canada at the end of the authorized stay
    • do not pose criminal, security or health risks to Canadians.
Cross-border business includes the following activities:
  • buying Canadian goods or services for a foreign business or government
  • taking orders for goods or services
  • attending meetings, conferences, conventions or trade fairs
  • providing after-sales service (mainly supervision, not hands-on labour)
  • being trained by a Canadian parent company for which the foreign national  works outside Canada
  • training employees of a Canadian subsidiary of a foreign company
  • being trained by a Canadian company that has sold to the foreign national equipment or services.
Free Trade Agreements

Business people include certain people entering Canada under the following free trade agreements:
  • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
  • Other Free Trade Agreements
  • General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)
NAFTA

Under Chapter 16 of NAFTA, citizens of Canada, the United States and Mexico can gain quicker, easier temporary entry into the three countries to conduct business or investment activities.

Business people covered by NAFTA do not need a labour market opinion from the labour department, Human Resources and Social Development Canada (“HRSDC”). This means that Canadian employers do not need to have a job offer approved by HRSDC to employ a United States or a Mexican business person, as set out in NAFTA.

Business people covered by NAFTA must, however, comply with the general provisions on temporary entry to Canada.

NAFTA applies to four specific categories of business people: business visitors, professionals, intra-company transferees, and traders and investors.

Business visitor is a separate category with separate requirements. Business visitors do not require a work permit.

A professional must:
  • be qualified to work in one of the more than 60 professions listed in Appendix 1603.D.1 of Chapter 16 of NAFTA (e.g. accountants, computer systems analysts, engineers, management consultants and technical publications writers) and
  • have pre-arranged employment with a Canadian enterprise in an occupation that matches the qualification.
An intra-company transferee must:
  • have worked continuously for at least one year in the preceding three years for the same or affiliated employer in the United States or Mexico
  • be transferred to Canada to work temporarily for the same or an affiliated employer and
  • work in a capacity that is managerial, executive or that involves specialized knowledge.
A trader or an investor must:
  • be seeking to carry out substantial trade in goods or services, mainly between Canada and her or his country of citizenship, or conduct substantial investment activities in Canada, in a supervisory or an executive capacity, or in a capacity that involves essential skills
Other Free Trade Agreements

Additional Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), such as the Canada-Chile FTA and the Canada-Peru FTA were modelled after the NAFTA, thereby making it easier for business persons from one country to temporarily enter the other country. The rules and requirements are similar to those under NAFTA and cover categories of business people such as: business visitors, professionals, intra-company transferees, and traders and investors.

General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)

Under GATS, Canada has committed to making it easier for certain business people who are foreign service providers in certain sectors to access the Canadian market. The commitments apply to service providers from more than 140 World Trade Organization member countries.

Three categories of business people are covered: business visitors, professionals and intra-company transferees. Qualified business people can enter Canada more easily because they do not need a labour market opinion from HRSDC or, in the case of business visitors, a work permit.

However, the provisions under GATS are generally more restrictive than those under NAFTA or the other FTAs.

Information Technology Workers

An example of the influence of changes in the global economy on corporate immigration policies in the Canadian context may be found in the evolution of the information technology workers program (“IT Workers Program”).

The IT Workers Program had its beginnings in May of 1997, in order to address a shortage of skilled workers in the rapidly growing IT sector.  At that time, Canada agreed to a facilitated process for selected IT occupations on a pilot basis.

Particularly during the high tech boom, in order to fill critical shortages in Canada’s software industry, Canada implemented a simplified entry process for workers whose skills are in high demand in that industry.

Under the National Labour Market Opinion (“LMO”) pilot, an employer was not required to obtain an LMO in order to hire foreign workers and no confirmation letter from HRSDC was issued.  Citizenship and Immigration Canada (“CIC “) and Canada Border Services Agency (“CBSA”) would determine whether the job offered falls under one of the selected occupations.  Hence, the work permit process was expedited. The rationale was that entry of this selected group of IT workers would not have a negative impact on Canadian or permanent-resident job seekers and workers.

The pilot program then became a permanent program.  However, with changes in the global high tech industry and its impact on the Canadian IT sector, on May 20, 2010, HRSDC issued a notice for employers that the facilitated process would end on September 30, 2010.

The rationale provided by the Canadian Government was as follows:

“Ending the facilitated process will contribute to the integrity of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP), a Government of Canada priority, by ensuring that the hiring of foreign workers does not result in an adverse impact on the Canadian labour market. It also ensures that the TFWP is more responsive to the current and future labour market conditions in the information and communications technology industry, and ensure greater access to available jobs by Canadians and permanent residents.”

Therefore, effective October 1, 2010, Canadian employers wishing to hire temporary foreign workers previously eligible for IT facilitated processing were required to apply for an LMO.

Also, effective October 1, 2010, work permit applications received by CIC or CBSA at a port of entry would require a copy of the LMO for the seven specific IT occupations that were previously under the facilitated process.

However, as at the date of this paper, the IT Workers Program remained in place in two provinces—British Columbia and Quebec.
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