CANADA'S LEADING INFORMATION SOURCE FOR THE METALWORKING INDUSTRY

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CANADA'S LEADING INFORMATION SOURCE FOR THE METALWORKING INDUSTRY

CANADA'S LEADING INFORMATION SOURCE FOR THE METALWORKING INDUSTRY

The talent crisis requires government action: Chamber of Commerce

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We need to build a more flexible Canada with a focus on lifelong learning in a time of economic transition, argue the authors of a Canadian Chamber of Commerce opinion piece. PHOTO courtesy Sandvik Coromant.

Canada cannot afford to fall further behind in an increasingly competitive and turbulent world, a world driven by talent and ideas, say the authors of an opinion piece penned for the Canadian Chamber of Commerce

Universities, students and Canadian business leaders all agree that we have to act now to foster and retain the next generation of Canadian talent. But government can help create the conditions for success with a few common-sense solutions, argue Perrin Beatty, President and CEO, Canadian Chamber of Commerce, Paul Davidson, President and CEO, Universities Canada and Christian Fotang, Chair, Canadian Alliance of Student Associations

“Businesses in virtually every sector … want to hire more Canadians with the right skills to help sustain and grow their operations. Currently, Canada needs skilled and specialized talent to fill 400,000 new jobs in these growing and evolving fields,” the three state in their opinion piece. “That’s why Canada must reinvest in research talent. With recent generational investments in science in peer countries, including the U.S., Canada’s ability to attract and retain talented researchers at the graduate level is at risk. Today’s cohort of young, diverse research talent faces more obstacles and slimmer prospects than ever. Reduced funding levels mean graduate students are earning wages that place them below the poverty line, hampering our ability to contend for the best and brightest.”

Canada may also be chasing away global talent while failing to reduce barriers for international students, Beatty, Davidson and Fotang argue.

“While Canada is an attractive destination for international students and researchers, permit processing backlogs are stretching for months beyond the processing times seen in peer countries — and every student with an offer of admission who chooses to study elsewhere is a loss for Canada. Bureaucratic backlogs cannot be allowed to harm our institutions and economy,” they argue.

They add that with the U.S.’s $200-billion investment in science through the CHIPS and Science Act redrawing the global science policy landscape, Canada needs ambition. That’s why it’s time for the federal government to grow Canada’s research ecosystem to compete globally, they state.

“It is unacceptable that, as our peers reinvest in research, our overall share of economic activity dedicated to research and development has continued to decline over the last 10 years, sitting well below the OECD average of 2.4 per cent, well behind global innovation leaders,” their opinion piece declares. “This consistent underperformance relative to our peers in the OECD is alarming. And while seriously reinvesting in our researchers and scientists will help, it will not be enough. Researchers must also be equipped to partner with business, commercialize their ideas and create impact on issues like climate change and reconciliation.”

Finally, the federal government needs to begin work on building a more flexible Canada with a focus on lifelong learning in a time of economic transition, they add. Every student in a post-secondary program should have access to work-integrated learning, and federal policy should help make this possible.

“Workers looking to change careers and mid-career professionals will also need access to short, tailored programs aimed at sharpening specific skills. Canada needs national alignment on a microcredentials policy to ensure programming everywhere in Canada is high quality and meets the needs of workers and employers,” they write.

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