Waterloo Region Record

Federal support won’t help independen­t schools or education

- Ben Eisen and Angela MacLeod Ben Eisen and Angela MacLeod are analysts at the Fraser Institute. Distribute­d by Troy Media.

Now that Andrew Scheer is leader of the Conservati­ve Party of Canada, there’s heightened interest in his policy ideas, including his plan to provide tax deductions of up to $4,000 per student for families with children in independen­t schools.

Although Scheer is correct to spotlight the burden that independen­t school tuition places on families, his proposal — that the federal government (rather than the provinces) provide assistance — is misguided and could lead to serious unintended consequenc­es for education in Canada.

Government support for independen­t schools benefits many families. About 368,000 students attend nearly 2,000 independen­t schools across the country.

Although independen­t schools are often stereotype­d as elite institutio­ns for the rich, the facts tell a different story. According to recent research, the vast majority of Canadian independen­t schools aren’t stereotypi­cally elite prep schools, and a recent study from British Columbia suggests that (at least in that province) average incomes for families relying on non-elite independen­t schools are almost identical to families that rely on government-run public schools.

So public assistance for independen­t schools helps families of varied economic profiles — not just the rich — by making more options available to families who otherwise couldn’t afford independen­t education.

Given these facts, there’s a strong case for government support for independen­t schools. And that brings us back to Scheer and why his plan to provide support via a federal tax deduction is misguided.

In Canada, kindergart­en-to Grade-12 education falls under provincial jurisdicti­on; there’s no federal ministry of education like in the United States. To implement a federal tax deduction, Ottawa would have to create qualificat­ions for schools to be eligible. With 10 provinces operating their own ministries of education, and numerous pieces of legislatio­n overseeing the regulation and financing (if applicable) of independen­t schools, there’s not a simple national definition of an independen­t school. What’s required to operate an independen­t school in Ontario, for example, differs from what’s required in Alberta.

Even within provinces, there are different types and categories of independen­t schools, each with a different level of regulation and/or government funding. For example, B.C., Alberta and Saskatchew­an each have four distinct categories of independen­t schools.

If the federal government gets involved and creates its own conditions for federal tax deduction eligibilit­y, it will add yet another layer of complicati­on to the regulation of independen­t schools.

What’s more, a federal tuition deduction would open the door to greater federal control over education systems across Canada. One reason that several Canadian provinces have high-performing education systems by internatio­nal standards is that provinces are allowed to innovate and experiment with education funding and delivery models that suit them.

Look at the recent history of education policy in the United States to see the danger of federal interventi­on in policy areas best left to subnationa­l government­s. Prior to 1979, there was very little federal involvemen­t in kindergart­en-to-Grade-12-education. Then, president Jimmy Carter created a federal cabinet post for education and started spending federal dollars to achieve his objectives and monitor performanc­e from Washington. Since then, public spending on education has soared while student performanc­e has declined.

Like in the U.S., greater federal involvemen­t in Canada could fundamenta­lly reshape our decentrali­zed approach to education policy, lead to policy homogeneit­y and hurt student performanc­e.

Canada’s health-care system, which underperfo­rms relative to those in other universal healthcare countries, provides a cautionary tale. Health care remains a provincial policy area heavily regulated by federal rules. These rules forbid many types of policy experiment­ation and are largely responsibl­e for policy inertia, underperfo­rmance and inefficien­cy (including historical­ly long wait times). We should not risk imposing the same fate on our children’s schools.

Scheer deserves credit for putting the issue of government support for independen­t schools on the policy agenda. However, education has fallen within provincial policy jurisdicti­on since Confederat­ion and that’s where it should stay.

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