“International students provide significant cultural, social and economic benefits to their communities, but they have also faced challenges navigating life in Canada. We are revising the cost-of-living threshold so that international students understand the true cost of living here. This measure is key to their success in Canada. We are also exploring options to ensure that students find adequate housing. These long-overdue changes will protect international students from financially vulnerable situations and exploitation.”
Not all students will be able to meet the new level of savings
The government acknowledges that not all students will be able to prove they have CDN$20,000+ in savings, but that there is a plan to pilot new ideas that will help “underrepresented cohorts” of international students to come to Canada to study. Until then, we can assume that relatively less wealthy cohorts will find it impossible to study in Canada. Speaking with Canada’s Global News, Sarom Rho, the national coordinator of Migrant Students United, described Ottawa’s immigration policy as a “rollercoaster” and said: “The feds just doubled the financial requirements for study permits, effectively creating a cap and excluding prospective working-class students worldwide who will now be scrambling in the next three weeks to find an extra $10,000 dollars.” Mr Rho said that his association will push back against “monthly improvisations and chaotic twists that let exploitation and abuse continue” and continue to speak up for stable, fair rules and permanent residency for all."Spiralling costs of living are affecting many international students
While the new savings threshold will come as a shock to many students, it is also true that a notable portion of international students are finding it difficult to live comfortably in Canada given how much the cost of living has increased over the past couple of years. A September 2023 survey by the Daily Bread food bank of 180 international students who regularly visit four major Toronto food banks found that “Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada’s estimated living expense used during the application process is nearly half of what a student in Toronto typically spends.” The Daily Bread said that “When asked how their experience in Canada compared with what they were expecting, respondents noted that Canada was much more expensive than they thought it would be, particularly with respect to housing and food.” The proportion of food bank users with temporary status – i.e., student/visitor/work visa – rose from 10% 2022 to 24% in 2023. Of “new food bank users,” i.e., people who have never relied on a food bank before their first visit, 87% were born outside of Canada.Minister warns institutions and provinces to improve student supports
Speaking to the media, Mr Miller said that the government expects that institutions “only accept the number of students that they are able to provide for, that they’re able to house, or assist in finding off-campus housing. He continued: “Ahead of September 2024, we are prepared to take necessary measures, including significantly limiting visas, to ensure that designated learning institutions provide adequate and sufficient student supports.” Mr Miller said it was “imperative that all stakeholders – provincial and territorial governments, learning institutions and other education stakeholders” work together at ensuring international students are well supported, but he added:“Enough is enough. If provinces and territories cannot do this, we will do it for them and they will not like the bluntness of the instruments that we use … Provinces have a number of tools at their disposal — namely the regulation of the designated learning institutions, that in some cases just need actually to be shut down.”The national government has become much more active over the past year in moving to regulate Canada’s international education sector. In 2024, it will roll out a “Trusted Institution Framework” that will see some designated learning institutions (DLIs) rewarded for providing exemplary support and outcomes for international students. Many details of this new framework have not yet been made public, but the core concept is that colleges, universities, and other post-secondary institutions will be assessed against “criteria that demonstrates that they are reliable partners with regard to sustainable intake, identifying genuine students, monitoring and reporting on their compliance, and providing a safe and enriching experience for their international students.”