Lethbridge Herald

Auditor finds $2.4B in unpaid student loans

- Lee Berthiaume

Canada’s auditor general has called for the federal government to step up its recovery of outstandin­g student loans to keep taxpayers from being left on the hook after discoverin­g that $2.4 billion in such loans were in default last year.

The finding is in one of several reports tabled in Parliament on Wednesday, which included a scathing assessment of the military’s resupply system and concerns around how the Canadian Commercial Corporatio­n considered human rights in deals with foreign countries.

That Crown corporatio­n was responsibl­e for inking the $14-billion deal in 2014 to sell Canadian-made armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia, which has since become a lightning rod of controvers­y due to Saudi Arabia’s poor human-rights record.

The auditor’s review of the federal government’s studentloa­n programs cited a number of problems with measures intended to help those unable to repay what they borrowed, starting with a failure to assess whether those asking for loan relief actually qualified.

There were also concerns that students were not being properly informed of their financial obligation­s when it came to repaying their loans, and that recent changes had made it easier for those receiving in the government’s loan-relief program to qualify for non-payment.

Eighty-seven per cent of recent borrowers who were participat­ing in the government’s repayment assistance plan were not making repayments on $2.9 billion in loans, according to the auditor’s report.

The auditor also found shortfalls in the government’s approach to recovering outstandin­g loans, with the Canada Revenue Agency, which is responsibl­e for such efforts, not having the same powers to go after default student loans as it does for unpaid income tax.

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