Well, capacity limitations are a really big problem. Some provinces have turned away thousands and thousands of qualified students from colleges, because they are at capacity. The increase in enrollment this year was quite dramatic, and that's both a good thing and a bad thing. So capacity limitations are quite severe, and obviously that calls for more investment.
But on the international side, those students come with very big tuition fees attached to them—three, four, or five times what a Canadian student would pay—and that allows for capacity growth. There's an asset here. They pay fees that allow for the institutions to hire faculty, and maybe even expand capital equipment. So that's the inducement.
There's great pressure. The Government of Ontario admitted that it wants more international students, because they don't want to continue funding their post-secondary institutions at the same level. They see that as a real benefit for everyone.