Ontario verliert aufgrund der Genehmigungsbeschränkung schätzungsweise mehr als ein Drittel seiner internationalen Studenten: StatsCan

    https://ici.radio-canada.ca/rci/en/news/2252404/ontario-estimated-to-lose-more-than-a-third-of-its-international-students-following-permit-cap-statscan

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    1. Mr_Canada1867 on

      “Report says Ontario could lose 92,000 international students in 2025-2026”

      Tens of thousands of apartments/homes and jobs will be opening up

      That’s fantastic news for young Canadians

    2. Universities have been pissing away money for decades… in my day, they had one full-time administration position for every student at the school. It’s about time they show some restraint

    3. CastAside1812 on

      Only a third? Do you realize how many scammers and fraudsters we still have here?

    4. TubeframeMR2 on

      Pre pandemic there was always a help wanted sign in the McDonalds that I get my coffee at. It listed a number of perks like bus pass, signing bonus, shift premiums and others that I forgot. It disappeared after the pandemic. I keep looking for it to reappear. When it does I will then know that this unfortunate episode in Canadian Immigration policy has finally run its course.

    5. Why does the article frame it as a bad thing? Isn’t this a positive for citizens?
      I understand this will hurt schools but the majority of them have just turned into diploma mills.

    6. slumlordscanstarve on

      This is great. I am looking at rent prices in Peterborough and it is a slumlord hellscape. Can’t find anything nice for an affordable price. I have no idea how students are renting 1000 dollar rooms in a town that has no jobs or assistance.

    7. YBBOK-Kevin on

      For the first time since I was in grade school, my local Pizza Pizza has a „staff wanted“ sign. I am definitely seeing changes in the entry level job market.

      Has anyone seen similar?

    8. Due-Offer-3101 on

      in other words; good news for the overall economy.

      potential for lower rent, more rental units, more employment opportunity, potential for lower car insurance, and some schools now depending on canadian citizens to attend.

    9. InternMediocre7319 on

      Good. I don’t see why we must have to bring people from other countries to study in diploma mills, and give them post graduate work permit and permanent residency. This will only flood the market with low skilled, unemployable people hurting the labour market in the long term.

    10. Strict_Common6871 on

      This is very good, tuition goes up, young Canadian kids cannot afford education and stuck forever doing low-paid shitty jobs instead of international students. Win-win

    11. It will cause tuition to go up is the only downside I can see.

      I finished my trade ticket in BC last year when the foreign student quotas were reduced. The college was amalgamating several departments to reduce costs and our course head said that tuition is subsidized by the higher international student fees. I think the refrigeration technician course was going to go up by about $500 or so.

      On the plus side a lot more housing available so the costs should come down.

      Pay a bit more for tuition, pay less for housing….
      I’d probably still take this deal.

    12. FlyingRock20 on

      Good and it should be even more. System is broken and needs to be fixed. Schools got tons of waste going on as well.

    13. systemrename290 on

      This is good news. I think this will help lower the cost of housing and is a net positive when compared to the possibility of there being higher tuitions for *some* students. If tuition is too high for some, there’s plenty of skilled trades that young people can get into that will pay very well and set you up for a successful career.

    14. Let’s hope so. Carney promised 500,000 houses a year and to limit immigration and has done neither especially given sneaky ways to increase immigration through giving American citizenship rights in addition to higher than „forecast“ immigration, TFWs, asylum seekers, etc when levels are already far too high given overburdened the.health care and housing unaffordability. They either either simple minded or think we are.

    15. They’re not „losing“; they are gaining seats in colleges and living spaces for young Canadians trying to get a start in career and life.

    16. There was a presentation at U of T about the issue the pace of immigration and exploiting international students for profit has on official population numbers. Why those numbers are important and how it impacts things like infrastructure development, hospitals, schools, events, budgets and so on.

      They said the GTA’s population is around 7.1 million but virtually everyone just plans as if it’s 8.5 million. There is a strong, strong belief that the lag in census data(and people simply not reporting), huge spike in recent immigration and no clear tracking or deportation system has caused larger inaccuracies.

      I don’t think people realize they we did not track temporary residents here unlawfully (expired permits, visas etc..) at all or make any effort to remove them. We literally had no program to do so.

      https://immigration.ca/canada-seeks-ability-to-track-exit-of-temporary-residents/

      Immigration, refugees and Citizenship Canada did not prioritize managing departure compliance in collaboration with the CBSA. Although the CBSA would track entry and exit, IRCC didn’t care, had no system for deportation and no way to track them when in country. CBSA could say, hey guys, these people are still here in Canada. The IRCC would just shrug.

      Although this is changing, it hasn’t changed yet. I have no faith people are going to actually leave if they can’t study here.

    17. LawfulnessKooky8490 on

      Will lose more than a third of people who come permanently temporary.

    18. wickedplayer494 on

      Alright, and of those, how many are going to meaningful institutions that produce something of actual long-term value like TMU and Western, versus diploma mills like CDI?

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