IRCC Minister Transition Binder 2021: Temporary Immigration: How Visitors Come to Canada
Context and Impact of COVID-19
More and more people want to visit Canada
- International tourism generates ~ $23B annually.
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Visitor volumes fluctuate, but overall trend has been upwards for the last decade.
Year Tourist from countries other than United States United States tourist 2000 4,438,484 15,188,970 2001 4,109,209 15,570,214 2002 3,889,805 16,167,219 2003 3,301,928 14,232,401 2004 4,057,302 15,087,508 2005 4,379,856 14,390,696 2006 4,409,938 13,855,468 2007 4,559,680 13,375,201 2008 4,638,222 12,503,880 2009 4,069,917 11,667,233 2010 4,348,555 18,870,844 2011 4,419,042 11,596,943 2012 4,457,063 11,886,950 2013 4,581,718 11,477,624 2014 5,013,766 11,523,181 2015 5,308,449 12,668,836 2016 6,079,520 13,891,800 2017 6,641,481 14,241,683 2018 6,693,500 14,440,353 2019 7,140,684 15,004,542 2020 1,031,096 1,928,789 2021 178,764 177,692 - Depressed tourism volumes due to COVID-19 are expected to recover by the end of 2022, and resume growth trajectory from 2023 onwards.
Background
- The visitor program acts as Canada’s first line of defense by “pushing the border out” and screening visitors before departure to mitigate risk.
- By law, visitors from all countries require a visa to travel to Canada, unless otherwise exempt
- Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) screens nearly all visitors before they reach CanadaFootnote 1
- Type of screening depends on potential level of risk posed by a visitor, and is determined by nationality.
- Higher risk nationals must apply for a temporary resident visa and enrol their biometrics (i.e. fingerprints, photograph)
- Lower risk nationals travelling to or through Canada by air must apply online for an Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA)
How Visitor Screening Works
Temporary Resident Visa – Applies to majority of countries
Application
- Collects comprehensive details and supporting documents (e.g. bank statement)
Screening
- Biometrics required and comprehensive screening, including assessment of traveller’s intent
Review
- Manual review by officer; passport is physically inspected
Validity
- Up to 10 years
Fee
- $100 + $85 biometric fee
Processing Time
- 80% finalized in 21 daysFootnote 2
China and India are the top visa-required source countries.
Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA) – Applies to 54 visa-exempt countries
Application
- Fully digital, collects basic, self-declared traveller information
Screening
- Light-touch screening (e.g. known immigration history)
Review
- Most applications automatically approved by system in minutes
Validity
- Up to 5 years
Fee
- $7
Processing Time
- 80% finalized in 1 minuteFootnote 2
United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Mexico are the top eTA source countries.
Visa Policy Framework
- Canada’s Visa Policy Framework guides visa decisions for nationalities.
- Decisions seek to balance benefits – such as tourism & trade – with risks – such as rising asylum claims or threats to health & safety.
- Comprehensive framework assesses over 40 criteria, including:
- Safety and security concerns
- Passport integrity
- Bilateral benefits
- Temporary resident visa refusals
- Asylum claims
- Country conditions
- Canada’s visa policy is most aligned with the United States, given shared responsibility to protect the North American perimeter.
Considerations
Slow visa processing times have negatively affected client service
- Outdated information-technology systems limit our ability to improve the visitor experience and respond to immense growth in demand.
- Visa clients expect a more digital, streamlined process, and are frustrated by the need to surrender their passport during the application process.
- Visa processing capacity was already very stretched pre-COVID.
Without change, Canada could become a less attractive destination
- Competitor countries may offer simpler, better and faster service.
- Pre-COVID (2019) average visa processing timeFootnote 3 was 21 days, well above the 14-day service standard.
Staying competitive requires innovation and collaboration
- IRCC is the policy lead, but key partners include Canada Border Services Agency (enforcement), Global Affairs Canada (international relations), Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (tourism strategy) and industry players.
Key Takeaways
Nationality-based visa policy is broad and decisions can be politically sensitive
- This approach protects Canada’s immigration program and public safety, but makes assumptions about an entire country’s citizens.
- Countries do not fit neatly into two risk categories – all countries contain lower and higher-risk travellers.
- Lifting a visa communicates trust and partnership; imposing a visa is perceived as damaging to a country’s reputation and negatively impacts the bilateral relationship.
COVID-19 has altered the global migration landscape and amplified the need to transform Canada’s visitor program
- IRCC must continue to protect Canadians’ health, safety and security, while improving how visitors apply, are screened, and travel to Canada.
- IRCC is looking at ways to create a more digital and client-friendly program that processes visitors faster and more efficiently, as global travel resumes.
- New and more complex risks will continue to challenge our ability to detect fraud.
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