“…However, data from the 2006 census show that more than 24% of these immigrants obtained their highest degree in Canada, with this ratio jumping to 66% for those coming from the Middle East in the same age group. When the measurement error due to this imputation is addressed (Fortin et al, 2016;Aydede and Dar, 2016), the evidence shows that immigrants' foreign education appears to be significantly discounted in Canada even if immigrants work in jobs that match their training in terms of the level of schooling and specialization (Aydede and Dar, 2017). Nevertheless, it is quite possible that wage differences, commonly attributed to the lower quality of foreign credentials or occupational mismatch, merely reflect lower wage offers that immigrant workers receive due to risk aversion among local firms faced with an elevated degree of asymmetric information associated with unfamiliar ethnic backgrounds.…”