• sbv
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    9 个月前

    No shiiiiiiiiit

    In Ontario, the data shows foreign students recruitment has spiked significantly since 2018, when Premier Doug Ford took office.

    The following year, Ford’s government froze post-secondary funding, cut domestic tuition by 10 per cent and launched a program explicitly designed to attract international students and their lucrative tuition fees to public colleges.

    Foreign students have been an easy way for governments to avoid funding post secondary institutions for decades.

      • sbv
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        9 个月前

        Sometimes Canada feels like three corporations extractive industries in a trenchcoat. Here we are, sucking tonnes of cash out of (mostly) developing economies, and the only reason this is getting airplay is because of the housing crisis.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    9 个月前

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Documents obtained by CBC News reveal which colleges and universities account for the greatest share of Canada’s steep growth in international students, and which now have the most to lose from a new cap on permits to study in this country.

    The data, obtained through access to information requests to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), shows the number of study permits granted each year since 2018 for foreign students to attend post-secondary institutions across the country.

    A CBC News analysis of the data reveals that what has been framed as a nationwide explosion in international student numbers — prompting Ottawa to impose an immediate two-year cap — is disproportionately linked to a handful of schools, the vast bulk of them public institutions, predominantly in Ontario.

    That translates into international students paying tens of billions of dollars into Canada’s post-secondary system — at a time when provincial governments were imposing austerity measures on public universities and colleges.

    Reporters pressed Ontario’s Minister of Colleges and Universities, Jill Dunlop, about how the government intends to make up for the loss in revenue from international students, but she repeatedly refused to give a direct answer.

    “Senior levels of government – federal and provincial – have spoken numerous times publicly about the lack of skilled workers now and projected into the future and how immigration is absolutely essential to filling those gaps,” said Daniel Lessard, manager of communications for Cambrian College, whose main campus is in Sudbury, Ont.


    The original article contains 1,914 words, the summary contains 240 words. Saved 87%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!