Invitations to Express Entry candidates with a provincial nomination up in 2018

Credit to Author: Stephen Smith| Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2018 15:36:59 +0000

Invitations issued to Express Entry candidates with a provincial nomination for permanent residence are on the rise this year, according to new data from the Government of Canada.  

Of the 62,500 Express Entry candidates invited to apply for Canadian permanent residence between January and September, 12 per cent — or roughly 7,500 — had a provincial nomination.

In 2017, ITAs issued to Express Entry candidates nominated by a Canadian province or territory during that same period amounted to nearly 10 per cent of all ITAs issued (6,437 of 66,322).

This portion remained stable through the rest of 2017, which ended with a total of  8,732 ITAs issued to provincial nominees out of 86,023 total invitations.

The increase reflects the growing importance of Canada’s Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) to the federal government’s overall immigration strategy.

The PNP works to spread the benefits of immigration more evenly across Canada by allowing participating provinces and territories to nominate a set number of economic immigration candidates for permanent residence each year.

Every province and territory with an immigrant nominee program now has at least one immigration stream that is linked to the federal Express Entry system, which manages the pool of candidates for Canada’s three main federal economic immigration programs — the Federal Skilled Worker Class, Federal Skilled Trades Class and the Canadian Experience Class.

Express Entry candidates who receive a provincial nomination are awarded an additional 600 points toward their Express Entry ranking score, which effectively guarantees an ITA in a subsequent Express Entry invitation round held by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).

To find out if you are eligible to enter the Express Entry pool, fill out a free assessment.

The federal government’s new multi-year immigration levels plan has admissions through Canada’s PNP set to rise by 6,000 next year, to 61,000.

By 2021, admissions through the PNP are expected to reach 71,300 — an increase of nearly 30 per cent over 2018’s target of 55,000.

The rising number of candidates in the Express Entry pool with a provincial nomination and the 600 points that go with it may be partly responsible for the increase that we’ve seen in Express Entry minimum scores in 2018, which haven’t gone below 440.

If this trend continues, obtaining a provincial nomination may now be one of the best bets for Express Entry candidates with scores below 440.

In its 2018 report to Parliament, IRCC noted that the PNP has grown “exponentially” since its implementation in 1996 — from 233 admissions in 1996 to 49,724 in 2017.

Of these nearly 50,000 new permanent residents admitted through the PNP in 2017, 13,531 were Express Entry candidates and their family members. IRCC said this was an increase of 73 per cent over Express Entry admissions in 2016.

The PNP’s growth is also helping alter settlement patterns away from Canada’s largest cities, which have long attracted the vast majority of newcomers to Canada.

Provinces like Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Manitoba and Saskatchewan all have Express Entry-linked nominee programs that have been active in 2018.

IRCC reported that 34 per cent of economic immigrants who arrived in Canada in 2017 were destined outside Ontario, British Columbia and Quebec — the provinces where Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal are located — compared to just 10 per cent in 1997.

A similar trend was identified in a new report by Statistics Canada, which also found that most economic immigrants remain where they first settle, be it a larger city or outside of one.

“The initial location decision of [economic principal applicants, or EPAs] is a very strong predictor of their location years later,” the study said. “Indeed, only about 11 per cent of EPAs have moved to or out of [Montreal, Toronto or Vancouver] by 10 years of landing.”

“Express Entry candidates should really get to know Canada’s various provincial nominee programs, especially given their rising star status in Canada’s immigration strategy,” said David Cohen, senior partner with the Campbell Cohen Canadian immigration law firm in Montreal. “The allure of big cities like Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver shouldn’t obscure the great things that provinces like Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Manitoba and Saskatchewan have to offer.”

To find out if you are eligible for any Canadian immigration program, fill out a free assessment.

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