Monday, March 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Credit Agency Warns Big Risk To Canadian Schools If China Pulls Students

The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2019 02:08 AM
  • Credit Agency Warns Big Risk To Canadian Schools If China Pulls Students

OTTAWA — Moody's Investors Services says three of Canada's biggest universities would face a cash crunch if Canada's diplomatic row with China results in the world's most populous nation pulling its students from Canadian schools.


Tuition for international students is much higher than that charged to Canadians and has become a "crucial" source of income for schools, Moody's says.


China has made no moves to cut off student travel to Canada but Moody's says there is a risk posed by the escalating diplomatic fight since Canada arrested a senior executive from Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei.


The Moody's warning comes several months after a dustup between Canada and Saudi Arabia resulted in the kingdom yanking the scholarships of Saudi students studying in Canada.


The impact of such a move by China would be far greater, Moody's warns in its report, because there are 15 times as many Chinese students in Canada.


Moody's notes Chinese students make up nearly two-thirds of the international student body at the University of Toronto, more than one-third at the University of British Columbia and almost one-fourth at McGill University.


"The intensification of political tensions between the Government of Canada and the Government of China poses credit risks for Canadian universities," the Moody's report warns.


When Saudi Arabia cut scholarships the Council of Ontario Universities warned Ontario schools alone would lose tens of millions of dollars, without adding in the overall economic impact from the students in terms of housing and living costs.


Global Affairs Canada reported that in 2016, international students spent more than $15 billion in Canada.


Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada statistics for 2018 show more than 77,000 Chinese students held study permits in Canada. In 2017, before Canada angered Saudi Arabia by calling for the immediate release of human rights activists the Saudi government had arrested, there were 5,090 Saudi Arabian students with Canadian permits.


That number fell to 2,720 in 2018.


"In that case, the impact on revenue was relatively contained given that Saudi students comprised only a small component of international students," Moody's says.


Statistics Canada reports a 40-per-cent increase in the number of international students in Canada between 2013 and 2017 but a 54-per-cent increase in Chinese students in that same period.


Statistics Canada also reports the average tuition for an international student at a Canadian university was $27,159 in 2018, nearly four times the $6,838 average tuition for Canadian residents.


Since the arrest of Meng Wanzhou in December, China has detained two Canadians, including a former diplomat, on national security grounds, and increased the punishment for a Canadian convicted of drug smuggling to a death sentence.


Canada is telling its citizens to exercise a "high degree of caution" when travelling to China because of the "arbitrary enforcement of local laws."


China in turn warned its citizens to "fully evaluate risks" before travelling to Canada.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Byelection In NDP Territory Tests Strength Of Minority Government

British Columbia's minority New Democrat government faces a crucial popularity test this month in a byelection in one of its traditionally safe constituencies where the outcome could threaten Premier John Horgan's one-seat hold on power.  

B.C. Byelection In NDP Territory Tests Strength Of Minority Government

Woman Offers Luxury Alberta Home For Just $25 And A Flair For The Written Word

Alla Wagner has lived in her $1.7-million rural property in Millarville, just south of Calgary, ever since it was built in 2011.

Woman Offers Luxury Alberta Home For Just $25 And A Flair For The Written Word

There's An App For That? CRA Eyes New, Digitally Secure Way To Access Services

There's An App For That? CRA Eyes New, Digitally Secure Way To Access Services
The new system could also be pushed into the private sector as the government and banks look to reduce the chances of identity fraud.

There's An App For That? CRA Eyes New, Digitally Secure Way To Access Services

Judge Reviewing Psychiatric Reports For Woman Rehab Dughmosh Found Guilty On Terror Charges

An Ontario judge will review psychiatric reports before handing down a sentence for a woman who draped herself in an ISIL banner and attacked Canadian Tire staff with a golf club and a butcher knife.

Judge Reviewing Psychiatric Reports For Woman Rehab Dughmosh Found Guilty On Terror Charges

Doug Ford Says The Liberals' Carbon Tax Will Plunge Canada Into Recession

Doug Ford Says The Liberals' Carbon Tax Will Plunge Canada Into Recession
TORONTO — The premier of Ontario says a federal carbon tax will plunge the country into recession.

Doug Ford Says The Liberals' Carbon Tax Will Plunge Canada Into Recession

B.C.'s Largest Public-Sector Union Wants Inquiry Into Money Laundering, Drugs

B.C.'s Largest Public-Sector Union Wants Inquiry Into Money Laundering, Drugs
The demand for an inquiry follows a decision late last year to drop criminal charges after a two-year RCMP investigation into money laundering.

B.C.'s Largest Public-Sector Union Wants Inquiry Into Money Laundering, Drugs