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Conservative provinces split from Trudeau on higher education

Alberta joins Ontario in cutting university funding and hiking tuition fees

Published on
October 25, 2019
Last updated
October 28, 2019
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The Canadian province of Alberta is cutting spending on higher education and increasing tuition fees, in a sign of the challenges facing newly re-elected prime minister Justin Trudeau in his bid to reduce the debt burden on graduates.

Alberta鈥檚 premier, Jason Kenney, announced an annual budget that will cut higher education funding by about 7 per cent a year and increase fees at a similar rate. Student loan costs will also rise.

The province had traditionally led Canada in terms of per-student university spending, and the repositioning was driven by sharp declines in Alberta鈥檚 once-prosperous oil industry. The goal, said Mr Kenney鈥檚 finance minister, Travis Toews, was to 鈥渁lign our spending with that of our comparator provinces鈥.

But the change of direction also highlights Canada鈥檚 growing political divide. Mr Trudeau was narrowly re-elected on聽promises聽to boost student grant aid and lower borrowing costs nationwide.

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But he failed to win a single seat in the western provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan, where there has been heavy criticism of the carbon tax introduced by Mr Trudeau and delays in building a controversial oil pipeline to the Pacific coast.

Education is largely a provincial, rather than a federal mandate, meaning that Mr Trudeau will need the help of regional administrations to achieve his policy goals.

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Mr Kenney choreographed his strategy well in advance, and public universities in the province described themselves as getting prepared. The new budget 鈥渟ignals a major shift in government policy around the funding of post-secondary education鈥, the president of the University of Alberta, David Turpin, said.

Professor Turpin acknowledged that the province has been generous in its support of higher education, and he said the University of Alberta 鈥渉as stewarded this public investment well鈥, as reflected in measures that include high rates of student graduation and external research support.

But that鈥檚 not the case for many other public universities in Alberta, said Grant Bishop, an associate director of research at the C.D. Howe Institute, as the province鈥檚 institutions overall accounted for some of Canada鈥檚 worst performances in enrolment and degree completion.

鈥淭he push is now to make higher education competitive鈥 in Alberta, he said.

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Mr Kenney鈥檚 solution involves a performance-based system that will allocate public dollars to institutions based on measures that include success in responding to employer needs.

That鈥檚 a controversial idea already being introduced in Ontario, where another conservative premier, Doug Ford, also has been聽cutting聽education budgets and asking students to pick up a bigger share.

Mr Kenney鈥檚 plan would allow institutions to increase tuition fees by an average of 7 per cent each year for three years.

Professor Turpin said his institution, which he is聽leaving聽next year, needed more time to consider the implications. 鈥淚n the longer term, we will need to make significant, structural changes,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e must consider all options, but also take time and not respond reflexively.鈥

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paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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