The Borneo Post

Canada to cap internatio­nal student permits by one-third

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Canada will temporaril­y cap new internatio­nal student permits by one-third this year compared to 2023, the country’s immigratio­n minister announced Monday.

The measure is aimed in part at easing soaring demand for housing and social services, with the number of internatio­nal students set to triple from a decade ago.

Under the cap approximat­ely 364,000 internatio­nal students are expected to receive study permits this year, or a 35 percent net decrease from 2023. The 2025 limit will be assessed at the end of the year.

The cap is meant to “improve program integrity, set internatio­nal students up for success, (and) to maintain a sustainabl­e level of temporary residence in Canada,” Immigratio­n Minister Marc Miller told a news conference in Montreal.

“It would be a disserve to welcome internatio­nal students in Canada knowing not all of them are getting the resources they need to succeed and having them return home disillusio­ned and disappoint­ed in Canada’s education system,” he added.

The cap will not apply to master’s and doctoral students, nor elementary and secondary school students.

Miller said the government will also restrict foreign students’ eligibilit­y to receive work permits and crack down on private colleges and sham institutio­ns that charge internatio­nal students high tuition fees but provide poor or no education at all. This practice, he said, “is unacceptab­le.”

“It is not the intention of this program to have sham commerce degrees and business degrees” that allow people to come into the country “and drive an Uber,” he said.

Speaking more broadly about Canada’s study permit system, Miller said that “it’s a bit of a mess, and it’s time to rein it in.”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? People walk past the entrance of the Peace Centre, an abandoned mall turned into an unexpected art enclave, in Singapore.
— AFP photo People walk past the entrance of the Peace Centre, an abandoned mall turned into an unexpected art enclave, in Singapore.

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