20.3 C
Ottawa
Saturday, July 27, 2024

What the cap on international students means for Doug Ford’s government 

Date:

Toronto·Analysis

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!

Premier Doug Ford’s government faces a sharp reduction in what has been a lucrative source of funding for Ontario’s colleges and universities, now that Ottawa plans to slash the number of international students allowed into Canada.

Facing 50% cut to foreign students, Ontario must decide how colleges and universities will share the pain

Mike Crawley · CBC News

·

Doug Ford walks past two signs that say 'Sheridan'

Ontario Premier Doug Ford walks to the podium to make an announcement at Sheridan College in Brampton, Ont., in January 2020. The federal government plans reduce the number of permits for international students to study at colleges and universities in Canada. In Ontario, those numbers are to be cut in half. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Premier Doug Ford’s government faces a sharp reduction in what has been a lucrative source of funding for Ontario’s colleges and universities now that Ottawa plans to slash the number of international students allowed into Canada.

With the province’s own expert panel revealing the perilous financial situation of Ontario’s colleges and universities just two months ago and post-secondary officials now saying the cut in international students visas will make things worse, the Ford government has some tough decisions to make. 

  • What questions do you have about how the federal government’s plan for an international student cap will affect Ontario colleges & universities? Send an email to ask@cbc.ca.

Ontario’s post-secondary sector has become increasingly reliant on the high tuition fees paid by foreign students and has recruited them in staggering numbers. 

Federal data shows about 240,000 permits granted to international students for post-secondary education in Ontario in each of the last two years.  Those numbers are to be cut in half, the federal Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, Marc Miller said this week.

Deciding how to divvy up that far slimmer allocation of international students among Ontario’s universities and colleges will be up to the provincial government. 

International students welcome sign in the Conestoga College, downtown Kitchener campus.

A sign at the downtown Kitchener campus of Conestoga College welcomes international students. Ontario’s 24 publicly funded colleges will bring in an estimated $3.3 billion from international student fees this year, more than from provincial government funding and domestic student fees combined. (Trishla Parekh/CBC)

Ontario’s dependence on revenue from international students first ramped up under Liberal premier Kathleen Wynne and has accelerated greatly under Ford.  Since the PCs came to power in 2018, federal figures show the number of study permits issued to international students for Ontario has doubled. 

Over the same timeframe, Ontario colleges and universities have seen their combined annual revenues from provincial grants and domestic tuition fees drop by 31 per cent when adjusted for inflation, according to research by Higher Education Strategy Associates, a consulting firm. 

‘Easy way to make ends meet’

Alex Usher, the firm’s president, says the provincial government explicitly encouraged the rapid growth in international students. 

“The way I look at it is that Ontario wants world class institutions, both universities and colleges, it’s just not willing to pay for them,” Usher said in an interview with CBC News. 

He says revenue from international students “has been the easy way to make ends meet.” 

The province’s expert panel also flagged this trend in its report, released in November. 

Photo of Alex Usher

Alex Usher, president of Higher Education Strategy Associates, a consulting firm, says several of Ontario’s publicly funded colleges are being kept afloat by revenue from international students enrolled in programs delivered by private career colleges. Those students will no longer be eligible for work permits under the federal government’s planned changes. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

“Many colleges and universities have passed the point where they could survive financially with only domestic students. They are financially sustainable only because of international students,” said the report. 

At Ontario’s universities, international students accounted for about one-sixth of total enrolment in undergraduate programs in 2021-22, the most recent year for which data are available. In addition to those 69,000 international undergraduates, there were another 23,000 foreign students in graduate programs, such as masters and doctoral degrees. 

Foreign student enrolment tripled in 5 years

Ontario’s colleges are even more acutely dependent on international students’ tuition fees: 

  • The number of international students enrolled at Ontario’s colleges exceeded 110,000 in 2021-22 (the most recent year for which statistics are available), triple the number from five years earlier. 

  • Colleges’ revenue from international student fees will be roughly $3.3 billion this year versus $1.9 billion in provincial government funding and $1 billion in domestic student fees, according to an estimate by Higher Education Strategy Associates.  

  • International students now outnumber domestic students at no fewer than nine of Ontario’s 24 publicly funded colleges. 

  • Ontario provides colleges with less per-student funding than every other province, according to an auditor general report  

Ontario’s colleges have relied on international student recruitment to make up for shortfalls in government funding and cuts to domestic tuition fees, says Alain Roy, vice president of international partnerships for Colleges and Institutes Canada, an association representing 140 publicly-funded post-secondary schools. 

The changes announced to the international student visa program and post-graduate work permits will have a huge impact, said Roy.

“Early signals from college presidents across the country, but also in Ontario, is that this could lead to program closures, campus closures. It will certainly mean a number of layoffs,” Roy said in an interview. 

No more work permits for certain students

Particularly vulnerable will be the programs offered by 15 of Ontario’s publicly funded colleges but delivered by private firms. 

Known as public college-private partnerships, the programs are specifically targeted to international students and provide them with a diploma or certificate from the public college. Ontario’s auditor general reported that 24,000 international students were enrolled in such programs in the fall of 2020. 

Those students have been eligible for a Canadian work permit after graduation, but Miller announced on Monday that will no longer be the case. 

Canada to cap number of international students

The federal government has announced it will cap the amount of international student permits it will approve for two years. The immigration minister says the change will help prevent students from attending ‘sham’ institutions.

David Orazietti, president of Sault College, says this change will “in effect shut down” his college’s programs delivered by the private Trios College to about 2,800 international students in Toronto and Brampton.

He says it’s unfair for the federal government to target those public college programs just because they are delivered by private partners. 

30% of college’s budget

“There are many public colleges in Ontario that need these resources to help create sustainability, and frankly this means the difference of having a balanced budget or having a deficit,” Orazietti said in an interview. 

He said the programs account for about 30 per cent of Sault College’s $125-million annual budget. 

Usher says those programs are keeping several Ontario colleges afloat. 

“You take that money away, there’s going to be some real issues in I would say half a dozen colleges across the province,” he said.

Jill Dunlop looks stands behind a microphone and looks toward the camera.

‘We are developing a plan forward and reviewing all possible options,’ said Jill Dunlop, Ontario’s Minister of Colleges and Universities, in a statement responding to Ottawa’s plans for cutting international student numbers. (CBC)

In an interview on CBC Radio’s Metro Morning, Miller justified the move by saying public college-private partnerships have become “a bit of a runaway train,” with people enrolling in them in hopes of getting a back door to permanent residence in Canada. 

He blames the provincial government rather than the colleges for the explosion in foreign students.  

What will Ford government do? 

“There has been significant underfunding by provinces for years in the post-secondary education system across Canada. Institutions have been smart and gone and recruited abroad,” Miller said

Faced with all of this, how will the Ford government respond? 

CBC News requested an interview with Ontario’s Minister of Colleges and Universities Jill Dunlop, but the request was declined. 

In a statement, Dunlop said the province has only just received the information about the federal government’s changes.

“We are developing a plan forward and reviewing all possible options,” said Dunlop’s statement. “We continue to work closely with our post-secondary institutions.” 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mike Crawley covers provincial affairs in Ontario for CBC News. He began his career as a newspaper reporter in B.C., filed stories from 19 countries in Africa as a freelance journalist, then joined the CBC in 2005. Mike was born and raised in Saint John, N.B.

know more

Popular

More like this
Related

Man Utd flop and Arsenal victim among six Premier League stars ‘like new signings’ in 2024/2025

We’re knee deep in transfer window shenanigans and while this lot aren’t new signings they will feel like they are having barely played last season. They provided little impact last term but could prove crucial in 2024/2025. Or not, like many actual new signings. Mason Mount (Manchester United) Described as a “superb player” by Kylian

Wealthier people aren’t splurging the way they used to. ‘They are losing steam.’

Please enable JS and disable any ad blockerknow more

Treasurys rally after signs of slowing inflation in June PCE report

Please enable JS and disable any ad blockerknow more

Asia-Pacific markets rebound after sell-off as investors assess Tokyo CPI, await U.S. inflation data

Center street shibuya.David Gee | Moment | Getty ImagesAsia-Pacific...