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Why do people leave their jobs in Canada?

Asheesh Moosapeta
Published: March 2, 2023

A by Statistics Canada reveals that workers in Canada overwhelmingly leave their jobs for reasons other than being laid off, or unsatisfied with their employment.

Some of the most common reasons for leaving a job included going back to school, retiring, having an illness or disability, and personal/family reasons.

Canada is poised to welcome over in the next three years, the majority of which will be economic immigrants who will help address the historic labour shortages Canada is currently experiencing.

However, do the country鈥檚 current labour conditions suggest that these new immigrants will find work that is reliably secure, and that they are content with? Statistics Canada鈥檚 recent study suggests favourable answers to these crucial questions.

Looking at responses from monthly Labour Force Surveys, the study aimed to shed light on why people reported leaving their jobs in 2022.

Results and key findings

The focused responses around four broad categories, with sub-reasons given for each:

  • Job Leavers: encompassing 鈥淥wn illness or disability鈥, 鈥淧ersonal or family reasons鈥, 鈥淕oing to school鈥, 鈥淒issatisfied鈥, 鈥淩etired鈥, and 鈥淥ther reasons鈥;
  • Job Losers: encompassing 鈥淧ermanent Layoff鈥, and 鈥淭emporary Layoff鈥;
  • 鈥淗ave not worked in the last year鈥; and
  • 鈥淣ever Worked鈥.

To simplify these responses are broken down into the following three categories:

  • Job Leavers: 鈥淒issatisfied鈥, 鈥淩etired鈥;
  • Job Losers: 鈥淧ermanent Layoff鈥, 鈥淭emporary Layoff鈥;
  • All other reasons will be cumulatively totaled as 鈥淥ther鈥

The pie chart breakdown of scores in percentages can be seen below:

Pie Chart percentage breakdown of reasons people left their job in 2022.

These responses help paint a broad picture of Canada鈥檚 labour market conditions.

Good signs for job security

Layoffs (identified as 鈥渏ob losers鈥 in the study) afflicted less than 10% of respondents. Among the total number of responses, people who lost their job totaled at just 6.6% throughout the year. This number was mostly comprised of people who had been permanently laid off; with temporary layoffs making up just 0.3% of the total.

This is an encouraging sign for those looking to join Canada鈥檚 labour market. Per the results of the study, job security remains strong in Canada, with very few layoffs throughout the year, and little to no interruption in regular employment for those with a job. Many of these layoffs in 2022 were also focused 鈥攁s large companies laid off staff internationally, and Canadian start-ups struggled to raise capital in the face of higher inflation rates.

High satisfaction among workforce

Job leavers who were dissatisfied with their current employment made up just 1% of total respondents鈥攊ndicating strong employment satisfaction among workers. This is consistent with other data that is available on Canadian job satisfaction: a also conducted by Statistics Canada found that out of 15,167 respondents, 83% (12,730) reported being either satisfied or very satisfied with their current employment.

A by Monster.com, and independent research company GfK found that Canadians were the most likely in the world to report either 鈥渓oving鈥 or 鈥渓iking their job a lot鈥. The low rate of people leaving their job due to being dissatisfied in 2022, further bolsters the idea that people working in Canada are overwhelmingly satisfied with the employment that they find. Canada鈥檚 (which protect foreign workers and Canadian nationals alike) are also to thank here.

This not only serves as another encouraging sign of good working conditions for new entrants in the labour market鈥攂ut also (when considered alongside the historic labour shortages that Canada is currently experiencing), is a good sign that the country is ready and able to accept newcomers with a robust labour infrastructure to do so.

The real reasons

So why do most people leave their jobs in Canada? Overwhelmingly it is for reasons such as going back to school, dealing with a disability, family/personal reasons, and of course retirement.

Retirees are a consistent and particularly pertinent group to pay attention to, as their exit from the workforce is one of the key drivers of immigration to Canada. More than five million Canadians are set to turn 65 this decade (roughly 13% of the population) and exit the workforce (increasing labour demand as a result). In the face of low birthrates newcomers are crucial to helping Canada address the worker shortages that are likely to occur as this demographic retires鈥攅specially as the country is already seeing historic levels of job vacancy.

Key takeaways

The data covered above paints a picture of the Canadian labour market consistent with previous findings: Canada is a country with a high rate of labour satisfaction, strong job security, and a high number of retirees that exit the workforce every year, driving up labour demand in the country.

Overwhelmingly these are positive signs for newcomers; that they can come to Canada, that their skills (with some variance based on specific profession) will be in demand, and that they can find a job they are satisfied with and can retain for the longer term鈥攚hile also being protected by Canada鈥檚 robust labour laws.

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