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Interesting calculation.In 2023, Canada spent an estimated $45–65 billion on immigration-related costs across federal, provincial, and municipal governments, according to budget documents, parliamentary budget officer estimates, and provincial disclosures. The total includes asylum housing, settlement services, healthcare, education, enforcement, and transfers to municipalities managing intake.
Canada recorded approximately 350,000 births in 2023. Using the midpoint of immigration spending (~$55 billion), this equates to roughly $157,000 per Canadian-born child if the same funds were instead allocated to domestic family support.
The calculation is straightforward:
•~$55B in total immigration-related spending (2023)
•÷ ~350,000 births
•= ~$157,000 per child
Even using the low-end estimate of $45 billion, the figure remains over $125,000 per child.
Officials have consistently framed immigration as a demographic and economic necessity, citing labor shortages and population aging. However, the spending profile suggests immigration functions as a near-total substitute for domestic population growth, rather than a supplement to it.
No comparable national program exists that offers Canadian families support on this scale. Existing child benefits and tax credits amount to a fraction of the per-capita resources currently directed toward immigration-driven population growth.
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