By the Numbers: Education is a right and shouldn’t be a burden

Ottawa – September 23, 2015 – The average tuition and other fees for Canadian undergraduates have tripled between the academic years 1993/94 and 2015/16, ranging from an increase of 35% in Newfoundland and Labrador to 248% in Ontario – according to a recent report released by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA).

This increase in tuition fees is well above the inflation, which only rose by 48.71 per cent between 1993 and 2015.

Tuition fees rose in all but one province, Newfoundland and Labrador, where tuition fees for undergraduate and graduate students have been frozen since 2003/2004.

Government (public) funding, as a share of university operating revenue, has declined from 77% in 1992, down to almost 60% in 2002, and falling to 55% in 2012. Over the same period of time the tuition fees increased as a component of university funding from about 20% in 1992, up to 33% in 2002, and rising to over 37% in 2012.

This year, Newfoundland and Labrador, where tuition fees are already the lowest in Canada, was the first province to entirely replace provincial loans with needs-based grants.

Since 2012, Ontario has provided students a 30% tuition bursary rebate, to a maximum of $1,830 annually, for undergraduates whose parents make $160,000 or less each year. (The rebate doesn’t apply to students who have been out of high school for more than five years and those who are attending school part-time.)

Newfoundland and Labrador will maintain its position over the next four years as the most affordable province on both the median and low-income Cost of Learning Index because of its tuition freeze and its shift to needs-based grants.

For median-income families, Ontario and New Bruns­wick are the least affordable provinces(in spite of Ontario’s in-province bursary rebate).

For low-income families, Saskatchewan is the least affordable; followed by Ontario and Nova Scotia (all three provinces have an in-province bursary).

Tuition and Compulsory Fees - 2015-16 Estimates

Source: Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) – What’s the Difference?