Immigrant children become more educated with higher income

A new Statistics Canada study shows immigrant children have a higher postsecondary education rate and make more money after their mid-20s than the overall Canadian population.

Immigrant kids participation in post-secondary studies
Kids who immigrated to Canada before age 15 had particularly high rates of postsecondary participation. The participation rate was about 70% for 20-year-old immigrants admitted as children, compared with about 59% of the overall Canadian population. At age 25, the participation rate was about 33% for immigrants admitted as children and about 27% for the overall Canadian population.
As immigrant kids landed at older ages, their participation in postsecondary education generally decreased. In 2019, nearly 77% of 20-year-old immigrants admitted before age five went into post-secondary studies. The participation rate dipped to about 72% for those admitted between ages five to nine, and nearly 64% for those admitted between the ages of 10 to 14 years. Various factors affect postsecondary participation, such as academic preparation and knowledge of official languages.
Postsecondary participation among child immigrants also appears to be related to their parents’ socioeconomic characteristics. As a result of Canada’s selection process for economic immigrants, most of these parents already have some postsecondary education at the time of their admission. Because of this, immigrants admitted as children of economic immigrant families have much higher postsecondary education participation than children admitted under other immigration categories, especially during early adulthood.
Children of economic immigrants saw a postsecondary participation rate of more than 75% at age 20, compared to children of sponsored families at about 61%, and the overall population of Canada’s rate at nearly 59%. Refugee children had the lowest participation in postsecondary education at a rate of nearly 54%.

2019 postsecondary education participation for immigrants admitted as children

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Economic class children report higher earnings

At age 20, immigrants who came to Canada as children had lower median wages ($10,900) than the overall Canadian population ($12,900). The study suggests this is because, at this age, immigrants were most likely enrolled in postsecondary studies. At age 25, the median wages of immigrants went up to $31,500, surpassing the overall Canadian population at $30,290.
At age 30, immigrants admitted as children of economic immigrants had median wages of $55,500, about 29% higher than the overall Canadian population at $42,940. Children admitted with refugee families were making slightly more than the Canadian average at $43,200, and children of sponsored families were making about $41,000.
2019 median wages of immigrants admitted as children by age and immigration category

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