Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

PBO: Student aid revamp may cost feds more

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jun, 2021 09:59 AM
  • PBO: Student aid revamp may cost feds more

The parliamentary budget office is estimating that the Liberals' revamped student-aid package could end up costing half-a-billion dollars more than government expects.

The Liberals proposed a sweeping package in the April budget to ease student loan costs and expand a non-repayable grant program for tens of thousands of post-secondary students and recent graduates.

In all, the budget estimated the various measures combined would cost just over $4.5 billion over five years.

The most expensive portion was the doubling of Canada Student Grants to students from low-income households until July 2023, which carries a cost of just over $3.1 billion.

Diving into the numbers, parliamentary budget officer Yves Giroux's officials estimate the actual cost for the overall package may be closer to $5 billion.

The report warns the actual costs are not certain, with spending on support and loan repayment influenced by the labour market and the broader economy.

The pandemic has not been kind to students in the workforce.

Statistics Canada's latest jobs report said the unemployment rate for students returning to classes in the fall stood at 23.1 per cent in May, typically the month when post-secondary students start into summer work after wrapping their studies for the school year.

The unemployment rate for returning students was down from the 40 per cent in May 2020, but higher than the 13.7 per cent recorded in May 2019.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Arrests surpass 100 at B.C. logging protests: RCMP

Arrests surpass 100 at B.C. logging protests: RCMP
The Mounties say more than 100 people have been arrested since enforcement of the court injunction began last week to allow workers with the Teal-Jones Group to resume logging in that area and in the Fairy Creek watershed to the south, near Port Renfrew.    

Arrests surpass 100 at B.C. logging protests: RCMP

Don't let AstraZeneca vaccines go to waste: Hajdu

Don't let AstraZeneca vaccines go to waste: Hajdu
The federal government is urging provinces not to waste thousands of doses of AstraZeneca vaccine that are due to expire in a few days.

Don't let AstraZeneca vaccines go to waste: Hajdu

Flight 752 victims harassed by Iran, report says

Flight 752 victims harassed by Iran, report says
In all, 176 people were killed when an Iranian surface-to-air missile shot down a passenger jet destined for Kyiv minutes after takeoff from Tehran on Jan. 8, 2020.

Flight 752 victims harassed by Iran, report says

G7 condemns Belarus, threatens sanctions

G7 condemns Belarus, threatens sanctions
In a statement Thursday, the countries' foreign ministers along with a European Union representative said they will impose "further sanctions as appropriate," condemning the act as an attack on press freedom and civil aviation rules.

G7 condemns Belarus, threatens sanctions

Trudeau delivers apology to Italian Canadians

Trudeau delivers apology to Italian Canadians
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau formally apologized on Thursday for the internment of Canadians of Italian descent during the Second World War, saying the community has carried the weight of the unjust policy for generations.

Trudeau delivers apology to Italian Canadians

PBO: Budget's stimulus impact may be small

PBO: Budget's stimulus impact may be small
The Liberals have said their budget plan unveiled in April, and currently being scrutinized by parliamentarians, would create thousands of jobs and pull the country out of the economic hole the pandemic has dug.

PBO: Budget's stimulus impact may be small