Canada in 2060
What will Canada be like in 2060?
Canada in 2060
1. How will the demography of Canada change?
2. What will our birth rate and death rate be?
3. Will our immigrants come from the same countries as today?
4. How will our First Nations community change?
5. What challenges might Canada face.
To Start off with, how will the demography of Canada change?
Demography is the study of the characteristics of human populations, such as size, growth, density, distribution, and birth and death rates. This is Canada's demography today(The video below). It seems that Canada's demography today is a lot higher than what it is in 2060, that may be because country's are developing very fast, and in the future people might not need to migrate to Canada because of that.
What challenges might Canada face...
Canada might have a hard time finding immigrants to come to the country to work and keep the country stable. Also, all the technology we use in schools could escalate and we would use it for everything, maybe even tests, and if you think about the usage of paper and the cutting down of trees it could be good for the environment, but we should also consider their long-term effects that too much screen time has on our brains, our brains could be permanently rewired to only know how to use electronics, and what would we do if the whole world had a power outage.
Will our immigrants come from the same countries as today?
Depending on how developed the country's are, when Canada gets to the fourth group that like to take planes, the other Countries might have only just started getting to the third stage or in other words when Canada gets to all the high tech devices, countries, like Africa that have poverty and less education might only be in the stage that we are currently in.
See the pictures
Canada's demography
How much they allow per year.
The reality is that Canada's average 250,000 per year immigration intake since 1990 has been far too high. In fact, Canada's intake is the highest per capita in the world.
Canada is changing.
There have been more changes to Canada’s immigration policy in the last several months than in the entire history of the nation.