"I found this recent article form CBC
indicative of Canadian Multicultural Society and may be
encouraging for anyone who intends
to immigrate to
Canada that "visible minorities" are not
minorities in Canada but the fabric Canada is made
up."
Immigration in Canada:
from 1947 to 2017
Celebrating the past and
projecting the future
Last Updated February 16,
2007
In the 2001 census, 13 per cent
of Canadians identified themselves as belonging to a visible
minority.
But by 2017, if Statistics Canada
projections hold true, that number could climb to between 19
and 23 per cent.
What's more, by Canada's 150th
birthday, almost 95 per cent of visible minorities would live
in metropolitan areas, with three-quarters living in Toronto,
Vancouver or Montreal. And about one-half of the people living
in Toronto and Vancouver would belong to a visible minority by
2017.
According to the projections, the
visible minority population of Toronto will range between 2.8
million and nearly 3.9 million within 12 years.
The main reason for this,
StatsCan says, is an expectation of sustained immigration to
Canada over the next 12 years, and the fact that a high
proportion of immigrants are non-white.
Statistics Canada set up five
different scenarios for future immigration rates and population
growth. These scenarios predict that Canada's immigrant
population could reach between seven million and 9.3 million in
2017.
That's an increase of between 24
per cent and 65 per cent from 2001, while the non-immigrant
population of Canada would increase just four to 12 per
cent.
Chinese and South
Asians were the largest visibly minority groups in Canada
according to the 2001 census, and the projection doesn't see
that changing. Roughly one-half of all visible minorities would
belong to those groups by 2017.
Blacks would
remain Canada's third-largest minority group, reaching a
population of about one million.
In Toronto, about
a third of visible minorities would be South Asians. Nearly one
half of the visible minority population in Vancouver would be
Chinese. And in Montreal, blacks and Arabs would remain the
largest visible minority groups, representing 27 per cent and
19 per cent of the minority population,
respectively.
Chinese and South
Asians were the largest visibly minority groups in Canada
according to the 2001 census, and the projection doesn't see
that changing. Roughly one-half of all visible minorities would
belong to those groups by 2017.
Blacks would
remain Canada's third-largest minority group, reaching a
population of about one million.
In Toronto, about
a third of visible minorities would be South Asians. Nearly one
half of the visible minority population in Vancouver would be
Chinese. And in Montreal, blacks and Arabs would remain the
largest visible minority groups, representing 27 per cent and
19 per cent of the minority population,
respectively.
Source: CBC
News
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