The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives has been, and continues to be, profoundly important to Canadian democracy…. It is virtually unique in its breadth of ideas and its depth of research.
- Ed Broadbent
OTTAWA—Ontario’s system of financing higher education is becoming less equitable and more regressive for families, says a study released today by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA).
According to the study, if a middle-income Ontario family dedicated every cent of their after-tax earnings towards the cost of their child’s university tuition fees starting on September 1, 2011, they would have to work until March 14, 2012 (195 days) before they paid for a four-year degree.
In 1990, it would have taken the same family only until November 27th, 1990 (87 days). For those students who gain entry into professional programs like medicine or law, it may take a middle-income family over a year of earnings to pay just tuition fees.
“Ontario families are being forced to play priority roulette,” says Erika Shaker, director of the CCPA Education Project. “The trifecta of stagnant incomes, household debt, and rising tuition fees means that families are having to make difficult choices around the kitchen table about what to prioritize: meeting basic expenses, saving for retirement, paying down their debt or sending their kids to university. This hits lower- and middle-income families especially hard.”
The study offers two alternatives to increased downloading onto families.
“The 2009 Ontario corporate tax cut, could have rolled back tuition fees to 1990 levels, representing a reduction in tuition fees from $6,500 to $2,500 a year,” says CCPA research associate David Macdonald.
“If we implemented the reduction through the personal tax system, it would cost an average of $100/year per family to reduce undergraduate tuition fees to 1990 levels. For an annual average of $170 a family, undergraduate university tuition fees could be eliminated altogether. This progressively-administered expenditure represents exceptional value and cost-effectiveness for families who otherwise face increased sacrifices and ever higher debt loads.”
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Under Pressure: The impact of rising tuition fees on Ontario families is available on the CCPA website: http://policyalternatives.ca
For more information contact Kerri-Anne Finn, CCPA Senior Communications Officer, at 613-563-1341 x306.
Join us on Friday February 25th from 7pm to 9pm to celebrate the official book launch of "Feminism FOR REAL: Deconstructing the Academic Industrial Complex of Feminism" edited by Jessica Yee. National book launch dates across Canada and the United States will be announced in the coming weeks.
With an opening address from Lee Maracle, drumming by Shandra Spears-Bombay and rattle dance by DJ Danforth, this event will feature spoken... word performances and round table discussions from the book contributors, followed by a screening of "The Road Forward", dedicated to the countless First Nations women who have "disappeared" on British Columbia's "Highway of Tears". More information about "The Road Forward" here: http://www.reddiva.ca/?p=5 57
Proceeds from the evening will go to a scholarship fund created for the children of missing and murdered Aboriginal women.
Venue main area is wheelchair accessible. We regret that the washroom is not wheelchair accessible.
As Ontario leans into a provincial election year and inches toward a pre-election budget, CCPA Research Associate Hugh Mackenzie shows how politically misguided it would be to bend to pressure to slash public funding in the name of deficit reduction. His prescription for provincial budget priorities can be found here in his fiscal analysis, Ontario's Deficit Quandary: When Politics Trump Economics.

The IRIS at York University and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives is pleased to announce the campus book launch of Climate Change: Who's Carrying the Burden?, which will draw on comments from the book’s contributors and provide an opportunity for the York public to speak directly with this insightful group of thinkers.
The book highlights how climate change can hide historical contexts in terms of how the carbon economy can lead to exploitation of natural resources, colonialism and capitalism. This book reveals some of the complexities behind carbon trading systems and urges us to imagine new ways of living.
Refreshments will be provided.
Join us December 10th in Toronto for an evening with Richard Wilkinson, author of The Spirit Level: Why Equality is Better for Everyone. The CCPA is pleased to co-sponsor this event. Please see details here.

What does it mean to live in a new age of inequality? Between the mid-1990s and the mid-2000s, income inequality grew faster in Canada than in all but one of 17 leading developed countries, according to the Conference Board of Canada's 2010 performance report.

The consequences are profound but not surprising to Richard Wilkinson, one of Britain's leading social epidemiologists and co-author of the groundbreaking, international bestseller The Spirit Level: Why Equality is Better for Everyone.
Urgent, provocative and genuinely uplifting, The Spirit Level has been heralded as providing a new way of thinking about ourselves and our communities the world over. Based on thirty years’ of research, The Spirit Level is forcing governments on both sides of the Atlantic to seriously rethink their policies towards social deprivation, crime, healthcare and education.
MASS LBP in partnership with the Wellesley Institute and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives with support from the Metcalf Foundation are pleased to announce the first Canadian appearance by Richard Wilkinson for a one-night-only talk about his research, recent findings and their implications for Canada.
Join Richard Wilkinson with hosts Ed Broadbent and Rick Blickstead, and panelists Jordan Peterson, Armine Yalnizyan and Matthew Mendelsohn for a lively and provocation discussion.
Click here to purchase your tickets.
Remind yourself of the event on Facebook.
The Age of Unequals: An Evening with Richard Wilkinson Betty Oliphant Theatre December 10th, 2010; 7pm - 8:30pm Doors open at 6:30 Proceeds benefitting the Equality Trust, with reception and author signing to follow.
National Ballet School of Canada
400 Jarvis Street
Toronto, Ontario m4y 2g6
Canada
Ottawa will welcome the internationally-renowned economist, David Korten, on October 29, 2010 at 7:30 pm at the Bronson Centre Theatre, 211 Bronson Avenue at Primrose Avenue (north of Somerset St. West.)

After David’s presentation, a conversational response will be heard from Bruce Campbell of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, Tony Clarke of the Polaris Institute and Kathy Vandergrift of Citizens for Public Justice.
The Master of Ceremonies will be CBC Radio’s Laurie Fagan.
On Saturday, a follow-up workshop will be held from 9:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the Bronson Centre’s MAC Hall, to allow all of the participants to discuss how The Great Turning can become a reality here in our communities.
Click here for more information on the evening and the Saturday workshop, as well as online tickets
The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives has been, and continues to be, profoundly important to Canadian democracy…. It is virtually unique in its breadth of ideas and its depth of research.
- Ed Broadbent