CANADA

Slow vaccine rollout could extend student enrolment slump

Canadian universities are facing a financial crunch amid the COVID-19 crisis, as a drop in foreign enrolment and shuttered campuses dent the bottom line and the country’s slow vaccine rollout weighs on the next school year, writes Julie Gordon for Reuters.

Public universities have become increasingly dependent on foreign students, who pay far higher tuition fees than domestic students, to boost their profits. International enrolment jumped 45% over the last five years, advocacy group Universities Canada said, but it fell 2.1% this year amid coronavirus restrictions.

That decline, coupled with a sharp fall in revenues from campus services like conferences, dorms, food halls and parking, has hit the universities hard. Canada’s slow vaccine campaign – it currently lags well behind global peers on inoculations – and the emergence of new variants could extend the slump in enrolment and campus revenues into the next school year, experts warn.
Full report on the Reuters site