EXPLAINING VARIATIONS IN SUCCESS OF SUBNATIONAL IMMIGRATION PROGRAMMES IN CANADA AND AUSTRALIA
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Abstract
The study explains variations in success of subnational immigration
programmes in Canada and Australia. Under these programmes, subnational units
have the right to select migrants to meet their regional economic and/or demographic
needs.
This study defines success in three ways and uses different data sources and
statistical analyses to answer the research questions for both Australia and Canada.
First, it is about attracting immigrants to the regions that are not primary destinations
for immigrants coming through federal programmes. The research shows that there
have been changes in initial settlement patterns of immigrants across Canada and
Australia after the introduction of regional immigration schemes. However, Canada
was more successful in redistributing immigration flows. Furthermore, in Australia,
economic factors played a more prominent role in attracting migrants and explaining
variations among subnational units.
The second dimension is immigrant retention patterns. Attracting migrants
does not automatically translate into their retention, especially considering
possibilities of within-country migration. The study examined factors explaining
variations in the retention rate of provincial nominees and skilled workers across
Canadian provinces and confirmed the impact of negative economic trends on
migrants’ retention. In the case of Australia, immigrant retention was measured
through migrants’ intention to stay in the initial destination. The findings supported
the rationale of regional immigration policies for targeting temporary migrants and
reliance on sponsor-based streams.
Finally, the third dimension is immigrants’ satisfaction with their settlement.
The study confirmed that in both Canada and Australia factors from all broad
groupings – economic factors, social integration factors, human capital factors, and
area level factors – are associated with immigrants’ satisfaction with their settlement
and the change in satisfaction over time.
The study is the first to compare outcomes across Canadian and Australian
subnational jurisdictions. Its findings should be of interest to policy-makers to inform
their thinking on regional immigration policies.