Spending on Postsecondary. of Education, Fact Sheet. Education Indicators in Canada. June 2011



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Catalogue no. 81-599-X Issue no. 007 ISSN: 1709-8653 ISBN: 978-1-100-18860-7 Education Indicators in Canada Spending on Postsecondary Education June 2011 Tourism and the Centre for Education Statistics Division Main Building, Room 2001, Ottawa, K1A 0T6 Telephone: 1-800-307-3382 Fax: 1-613-951-1333 Statistics Canada Statistique Canada Council of Ministers of Education, Canada Conseil des ministres de l Éducation (Canada)

How to obtain more information For information about this product or the wide range of services and data available from Statistics Canada, visit our website at www.statcan.gc.ca, e-mail us at infostats@statcan.gc.ca, or telephone us, Monday to Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., at the following numbers: Statistics Canada s National Contact Centre Toll-free telephone (Canada and United States): Inquiries line 1-800-263-1136 National telecommunications device for the hearing impaired 1-800-363-7629 Fax line 1-877-287-4369 Local or international calls: Inquiries line 1-613-951-8116 Fax line 1-613-951-0581 Depository Services Program Inquiries line 1-800-635-7943 Fax line 1-800-565-7757 To access this product This product, Catalogue no. 81-599-X, is available for free in electronic format. To obtain a single issue, visit our website at www.statcan.gc.ca and select Publications. Standards of service to the public Statistics Canada is committed to serving its clients in a prompt, reliable and courteous manner. To this end, Statistics Canada has developed standards of service that its employees observe. To obtain a copy of these service standards, please contact Statistics Canada toll-free at 1-800-263-1136. The service standards are also published on www.statcan.gc.ca under About us > Providing services to Canadians. 2011 Canadian Education Statistics Council Permission is granted for non-commercial reproduction related to educational purposes, provided there is a clear acknowledgement of the source. Otherwise, no part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without prior permission from the Canadian Education Statistics Council, 95 St. Clair Ave. West, Suite 1106, Toronto, Ontario, M4V 1N6. Note of appreciation Canada owes the success of its statistical system to a long-standing partnership between Statistics Canada, the citizens of Canada, its businesses, governments and other institutions. Accurate and timely statistical information could not be produced without their continued cooperation and goodwill.

Education Indicators in Canada Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 81-599-X Issue no. 007 No. 7 Spending on Postsecondary Education In Canada, a public education is available free to all residents until the end of secondary school (up to a certain age depending on the province or territory). Funding from governments covers most costs for a public elementary and secondary education, but families usually have out-of-pocket expenses for their children s school supplies and school-related activities. As students move on to postsecondary education, costs can rise considerably. Although postsecondary institutions receive substantial government funding, student tuition fees are one of their most important sources of private funding. At the same time, the students who pay those tuition fees can also face many additional costs for other items related to their postsecondary education. Rising expenses on both sides have inspired much debate over the appropriate balance for this shared public private responsibility at the postsecondary level. This fact sheet offers brief outlines of spending on postsecondary education, 1 based on data from three different Statistics Canada surveys (see Table 1). Information is presented for Canada and the provinces. 1. The first fact sheet in the Pan-Canadian Education Indicators Program (PCEIP) series, Household Spending on Education, highlighted Canadian household expenses for educational expenses such as supplies, textbooks, and tuition costs at the pre-elementary and elementary-secondary, and postsecondary levels in 2007. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 81-599-X Issue no. 007 3

No. 7 Spending on Postsecondary Education Table 1 A brief outline of three surveys that provide data for Indicator B2: Public and private expenditures on education The information presented in this fact sheet is from the following Statistics Canada surveys, which provide some of the data for Indicator B2: Public and private expenditures on education, part of the Pan-Canadian Education Indicators Program (PCEIP). Indicator B2: Public and private Average expenditures Average university University expenditures on education per household Household spending on education tuition fees revenues PCEIP table(s) Table B.2.7 Table B.2.9 and Table B.2.11 Table B.2.12 Data source Survey of Household Tuition and Living Accommodation Financial Information of and description Spending (SHS) Costs for Full-time Students at Universities and Canadian Degree-granting Colleges Survey (FIUC) Institutions (TLAC) The main purpose of the SHS is TLAC was developed to provide The FIUC survey collects to obtain detailed information student financial information on information on income and about household spending on all universities and degree- expenditures for all consumer goods and services. granting colleges in Canada. universities and degreegranting colleges in Canada. Tuition/Student fees Respondents are asked to report Cost of tuition for full-time Canadian Payments obtained from total household expenses for undergraduate or graduate students students directly in the tuition fees. For postsecondary (foreign students are not included). form of tuition (credit and education, they are asked to Compulsory fees (e.g., for athletics, non-credit courses) and report how much was spent on health services and student other fees. tuition fees for university, trade associations) are not included. and professional courses (including colleges/cegep). Target population Private households in Canada All publicly funded degree- All publicly funded degree- (all household members). granting institutions in Canada. granting institutions Individuals temporarily living away (Privately funded institutions (universities and colleges) from their families (e.g., students with degree-granting in Canada. at university) are counted as authority are excluded.) members of their household in their originating province. Reference period Calendar year Academic year Academic year Data collection Data are collected directly from Data are collected annually Data are collected annually, survey respondents during via questionnaire completed directly from survey personal interviews. by the registrar or business respondents and via office at the institution. extractions from administrative files. For more information Handbook for the Pan- Handbook for the Pan- Handbook for the Pan- Canadian Education Canadian Education Canadian Education Indicators Program, Average Indicators Program, Average Indicators Program, expenditures per household university tuition fees University revenues Survey number 3508 Survey number 3123 Survey number 3121 http://www.statcan.gc.ca/ http://www.statcan.gc.ca/cgi- http://www.statcan.gc.ca/cgisurvey-enquete/household- bin/imdb/p2sv.pl?function= bin/imdb/p2sv.pl?function= menages/3508-eng.htm getsurvey&sdds=3123&lang= getsurvey&sdds=3121& en&db=imdb&adm=8&dis=2 langgetsurvey&sdds= 3121&lang=en&db=imdb &adm=8&dis=2 4 Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 81-599-X Issue no. 007

Spending on Postsecondary Education No. 7 Expenditures per household According to data from the Survey of Household Spending (SHS), total average household spending in Canada was $71,117 in 2009 (Table 2). 2 This estimate is based on reported expenses for all household members, including costs for the major spending categories of food, shelter, clothing, transportation, and personal taxes. Although the SHS was not designed to collect information specifically on education expenses (see Table 1), it does ask respondents to report household expenditures on education. In 2009, about one-third of households (33%) reported such expenditures, and 17% said they had incurred costs for postsecondary tuition (Table B.2.7). At the Canada level, the average expenditure on postsecondary tuition for these households was $4,674 (Table 2). This average for total household not individual spending on postsecondary tuition (fees for university, trade and professional courses), represented close to 5% of total average household expenditures among those Canadian households that reported such expenses. 3 The total average household spending for those households that reported postsecondary tuition expenditures in 2009 was about $30,000 higher, on average, than the total average household spending for all households in Canada. 2. For more information, see Survey of Household Spending in the December 17, 2010 edition of The Daily. 3. Although some provinces may have higher average postsecondary tuition fees than others, the SHS averages per household reporting such expenditures represent total household not individual spending on tuition. They also do not necessarily represent fees paid to attend a postsecondary institution in the particular province. For example, higher averages for household spending could reflect higher tuition fees for a household member pursuing a Master s degree in another province or perhaps a program at a higher-cost university outside of Canada. In other cases, total household expenditures may contain expenses for two or more household members in full-time postsecondary education, or for household members who are foreign students paying higher foreign tuition fees. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 81-599-X Issue no. 007 5

No. 7 Spending on Postsecondary Education Table 2 Household expenditures, all households and those reporting expenditures for postsecondary tuition 1, Canada and provinces, 2009 Households reporting postsecondary tuition All households Household expenditure on postsecondary tuition Household spending on education Total average Total average As household household proportion expenditures expenditures 2 Average of total Median dollars dollars dollars percent dollars Canada 71,117 100,547 4,674 4.6 2,500 Newfoundland and Labrador 57,605 84,711 3,018 3.6 2,000 Prince Edward Island 56,896 76,494 4,399 5.8 3,000 Nova Scotia 60,867 93,417 4,927 5.3 3,000 New Brunswick 61,212 85,774 5,170 6.0 4,500 Quebec 60,125 84,764 2,013 2.4 900 Ontario 76,577 110,243 5,676 5.1 4,000 Manitoba 66,608 86,136 3,466 4.0 2,500 Saskatchewan 69,377 93,657 4,606 4.9 4,000 Alberta 84,976 120,858 4,750 3.9 3,000 British Columbia 73,571 92,364 6,346 6.9 3,500 1. Reflects total household (not individual) spending on postsecondary tuition fees as defined in the Survey of Household Spending (SHS): university, trade and professional courses (including colleges and CEGEPs). 2. Among households that reported incurring expenditures for postsecondary tuition. Notes: Total average household expenditures are based on reported household spending for all household members, including costs for the major categories of food, shelter, clothing, transportation, and personal taxes. These figures would include any reported expenditures for education, including postsecondary tuition as defined in the Survey of Household Spending. Since 1999, the Survey of Household Spending (SHS) has included households in the territories in every odd-numbered year. The Canada-level averages presented for 2009 represent data for the 10 provinces and the territories (see PCEIP Table B.2.7). Source: Statistics Canada, Survey of Household Spending. The SHS estimates for average household spending on postsecondary tuition varied across the provinces in 2009, with the figures for most in the $3,000-to-$5,000 range (Table 2). The lowest average, seen in Quebec, reflects a postsecondary education system that includes CEGEPs, the majority of which are public programs with very low tuition fees, as well as relatively low university tuition fees. Average expenditures on the opposite, or higher end, reflect higher total tuition costs in a household. Examining the median expenditures per household offers a different perspective. When households are ranked from lowest to highest tuition expenditures, the median is the value of tuition expenditures that separates the households in two groups of equal numbers (50% of households have tuition expenditures lower than this amount and 50% have higher amounts). When comparing the provinces according to the differences between the average and the median, higher tuition expenditures experienced by some households in a province may result in a larger difference between the two measures in that province compared with another where the tuition fees incurred are more homogenous. The differences between the average and median expenditures for this 2009 snapshot of total household spending on postsecondary tuition are most noticeable in British Columbia, and much less pronounced in Saskatchewan and New Brunswick (Table 2). 6 Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 81-599-X Issue no. 007

Spending on Postsecondary Education No. 7 Average university tuition fees According to the Tuition and Living Accommodation Costs for Full-time Students at Canadian Degree-granting Institutions (TLAC) survey (see Table 1), average undergraduate tuition fees 4 in Canada were $4,747 for the 2008/2009 academic year (Chart 1; Table B.2.9). 5 Although this figure is similar to the SHS figure for average household spending on postsecondary tuition in 2009, the two averages are not directly comparable. TLAC fees reflect the cost of tuition only and do not include additional compulsory fees. TLAC also presents average tuition fees for graduate students, which were $5,737 in 2008/2009. 6 Quebec, along with Newfoundland and Labrador, had the lowest average tuition fees overall for both undergraduates and graduates in 2008/2009. Graduate tuition fees were higher than the national average in Ontario, Nova Scotia and British Columbia. Graduate tuition fees were typically higher, sometimes considerably more so, than undergraduate fees in half of the provinces. Chart 1 Average undergraduate and graduate university tuition fees, 1 full-time Canadian students, Canada and provinces, 2008/2009 dollars 9,000 8,000 dollars 9,000 8,000 7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 Que. N.L. Man. P.E.I. B.C. Can. Sask. Alta. N.B. Ont. N.S. 1,000 0 Undergraduate Graduate 1. Tuition data do not include additional compulsory fees such as those for athletics, health services or student associations. Fees for foreign students are not included. Source: Statistics Canada, Tuition and Living Accommodation Costs for Full-time Students at Canadian Degree-granting Institutions Survey (TLAC). 4. Tuition fee amounts in this section reflect tuition paid by one student for one year of studies. 5. Data for 2008/2009 are used to provide similar timelines for the survey results reported in this fact sheet; however, TLAC data for the 2006/2007 through 2010/2011 academic years are presented in PCEIP Table B.2.9, which was published on December 13, 2010. TLAC data for the 2011/2012 academic year are scheduled for release in mid-september 2011. 6. Since the tuition for some MBA programs (Executive Masters of Business Administration and Regular Masters of Business Administration) can be substantial and can therefore inflate average tuition costs, those fees are not included in the TLAC averages. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 81-599-X Issue no. 007 7

No. 7 Spending on Postsecondary Education University revenues The majority of revenues at Canadian publicly funded postsecondary institutions 7 are from public sources, reflecting government funding from all levels. According to the Financial Information of Universities and Colleges (FIUC) survey (see Table 1), university revenues from public sources comprised about 61% of total university revenues for the 2008/2009 academic year (Chart 2; Table B.2.12). The remaining 39% was from private sources and more than half of this portion (22%) was from student fees (tuition and other fees). Household spending on education Chart 2 University revenues from private sources (including student fees) and government sources, as proportions of total university revenues, Canada and provinces, 2008/2009 percent 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 N.L. Que. Sask. Alta. Man. P.E.I. Can. B.C. N.B. Ont. N.S. percent 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Student fees 1 Other private revenues 2 Government revenues 3 1. Student fees, which comprise part of private revenues, are payments obtained from students directly in the form of tuition (credit and non-credit courses) and other fees. 2. Private revenues are those obtained from any source other than government: student fees; non-government grants and contracts, donations and bequests; sales; investment; and miscellaneous. 3. Government revenues refers to grants and contracts from government departments and agencies at the federal, provincial, municipal and foreign levels. Source: Statistics Canada, Financial Information of Universities and Colleges Survey. 7. Includes government-sponsored research revenues and may differ from figures released by provinces. 8 Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 81-599-X Issue no. 007

Spending on Postsecondary Education No. 7 In 2008/2009, the proportions of government, or public, funding for postsecondary education revenues ranged from 49% in Nova Scotia to 72% in Alberta. These proportions were also relatively high in Saskatchewan (68%) and Newfoundland and Labrador (69%). Although the proportions from student fees were relatively low in Saskatchewan and Alberta (between 14% and 15%), the lowest figures (around 12%) were in Newfoundland and Labrador and Quebec 8. As noted earlier, undergraduate and graduate tuition fees in 2008/2009 were lowest in these two provinces. In Manitoba, Prince Edward Island and British Columbia, around 60% of university revenues were from government sources, but the proportions of private funds from student fees varied, from approximately half in Manitoba and Prince Edward Island to two-thirds in New Brunswick. Nova Scotia, Ontario and New Brunswick, which had relatively lower funding from government sources (all below 60%), received the highest proportions of private funding from student fees, around 30% in all three cases. Postsecondary education financing The three short snapshots of spending on postsecondary education in this fact sheet merely hint at some of the complexities that must be taken into account when exploring any cost issue related to education, particularly at the postsecondary level. The surveys used for this fact sheet have related, yet different objectives, and thus yield related results that provide information from different perspectives. Such differences, along with the implications of the actions of several levels of government and other aspects of individual spending, should be considered in any examination of spending on postsecondary education. Acknowledgements We would like to acknowledge the work of the Pan-Canadian Education Indicators Program (PCEIP) team at Statistics Canada and the Council of Ministers of Education, Canada (CMEC) Secretariat, as well as the assistance of the provincial-territorial members of the Strategic Management Committee of the Canadian Education Statistics Council in reviewing all the material. 8. It is relevant to note that 2008/2009 was rather an atypical year. Due to the financial crisis that substantially reduced the value of endowment funds, several Canadian universities declared significant losses in the category of investment revenues, thereby altering the relative contribution of the different sources of financial revenues at universities. Statistics Canada Catalogue no. 81-599-X Issue no. 007 9