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What's behind the problems with Canada's international student program?

Colleges and universities in Canada are making billions from international students, but many of those students have spoken out about living under precarious conditions.

Jovial Orlachi Osundu, president of the international students association at the University of Moncton, says international students are being wrongfully blamed for housing and job shortages.

«It is pretty unfair to use them as scapegoats to explain the wrong decisions that our political actors took in the past,» Osundu said.

Schools are now facing major reductions in the number of study permits for international students that they'll be allocated after the federal immigration minister announced a temporary cap on Monday, with the goal of targeting institutional «bad actors» and addressing the impact on the housing market.

But how did we get to this point in Canada's international student program in the first place?

Breaking down post-secondary education funding

There are more than one million international students in Canada, according to figures from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

Economist Mike Moffatt, an assistant professor at the Ivey Business School at Western University in London, Ont., says post-secondary institutions boosted international enrolment in response to provincial governments cutting back on funding «over the last decade or more.»

In Ontario, data from the provincial government shows operating grants for universities were lower in 2021 — $8,350 per student — than in 2008, when they were $8,514 per student, not accounting for inflation.

«At least a handful of schools have kind of gone above and beyond what was necessary to fill in the financial blanks and have massively increased their enrolment,» Moffatt said.

Moffatt notes

Read more on cbc.ca