The lingering financial fallout from the pandemic will cost our students for the rest of their lives
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By Jasmine Moulton
Ontario director
Canadian Taxpayers Federation.
The
pandemic has been hard on students of all ages. As many parents can
attest, their children have missed the social interaction at school and
have struggled to focus during online learning. Post-secondary students
have missed out on important and exciting life experiences, too.
But
even after in-class and on-campus learning has resumed to near normal
levels, the lingering financial fallout from the pandemic will cost
these students for the rest of their lives.
The
provincial and federal governments racked up enormous deficits over the
course of the past year that will be tacked on to the hundreds of
billions in debt they brought into the pandemic. Ontario’s debt is
projected to hit $398 billion by the end of this fiscal year, while the feds’ will surpass $1.1 trillion. The Fraser Institute calculates that each Ontarian’s individual portion of these debts combined now amounts to $58,559.
Imagine
how alarming an Ontario birth announcement would be if the sign on the
front lawn of new parents read: “It’s a boy, and he’s already nearly
$60,000 in debt!”
But
the principal amount to be repaid isn’t the only cost of debt. Interest
payments on the combined debt of the federal and provincial governments
will cost each Ontarian $1,375 this year, according to a report
from the Fraser Institute. If parents saved even their child’s portion
of that money in a registered education savings plan over 18 years,
they’d have a nest egg of $24,750, plus interest, to give their child to
help pay for post-secondary education. But because politicians have
spent beyond their means, that money goes to our governments’ creditors
instead.
Political
leadership is needed from provincial and federal governments to address
this costly debt burden being unfairly passed on to today’s students,
yet sadly the opposite is happening. Politicians love grandstanding
about dumping more money into education, even if it’s extremely
wasteful.
Consider
Ontario’s new French university, the Université de l’Ontario français,
set to open its doors to students for the first time in Toronto this
fall semester. By the original application deadline of Jan. 15, 2021,
UOF had only received 39 applications, 19 of which came from current
Ontario students. Data obtained from the Ontario University Application
Centre revealed that of those 19 Ontario students, only two listed UOF
as their first choice of school. Two!
UOF
was jointly funded by provincial and federal taxpayers at $63 million a
pop, for a total of $126 million in funding over eight years. That
means that if all 39 applicants are accepted and choose to attend UOF
this fall, then each student will cost taxpayers over $400,000 this year
alone.
While
some might like the idea of a French university in Toronto, proponents
should first advocate for provincial debt reduction because the $12.5
billion Ontario will spend on interest payments this year could have
paid for 99 UOFs (not that there’s enough demand to justify one).
The
provincial government also owes taxpayers, current and future, some
serious accountability regarding costs in Ontario’s public schools which
continue to increase while student performance declines.
Ontario Education Minister, Stephen Lecce, should be looking toward
innovative models for public education such as charter schools which
have succeeded in reducing costs while outperforming other public schools on average in Alberta.
Ontario
students have been through a lot this year, but the pandemic will
continue to cost them through higher tax bills for the rest of their
lives if their parents don’t demand governments get their spending under
control now.
Jasmine Moulton is Ontario Director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.
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