%0 Report %A Chen, Zong Jia %A Skuterud, Mikal %T The Relative Labour Market Performance of Former International Students: Evidence from the Canadian National Graduates Survey %D 2017 %8 2017 Apr %I Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) %C Bonn %7 IZA Discussion Paper %N 10699 %U https://www.iza.org/publications/dp10699 %X Canada is increasingly looking to international students as a source of postsecondary tuition revenues and new immigrants. By 2014, international students accounted for 10% of graduates from Canadian postsecondary institutions, up from 3% in 2000, and 11% of new permanent residents, up from 7% in 2010. This article compares the labour market performance of former international students (FISs) entering the Canadian labour market during the first decade of the 2000s to their Canadian-born-and-educated (CBE) and foreign-born-and-educated (FBE) counterparts. We find that FISs outperform FBE immigrants by a substantial margin and underperform CBE individuals graduating from similar academic programs by a relatively modest margin. We also find some limited evidence, particularly among women, of a deterioration in FIS outcomes through the 2000s relative to both comparison groups. We argue that this deterioration is consistent with a quality tradeoff as postsecondary institutions and governments have reached deeper into international student pools to meet their demands for students and new immigrants without a commensurate increase in their supply. %K international students %K labour market integration %K immigrant selection policy