Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Welcome to the witnesses who are contributing to today's important study.
The last time graduate scholarships were indexed was two decades ago. Mr. Chair, I defy you to find one thing that hasn't gone up in value in the past 20 years. I put the question to the government, and I'm still waiting for an answer. I think it's still looking.
For two decades, we haven't been supporting the next generation of scientists. That makes for great problems and even greater consequences. We could spend the whole day going through the list: financial insecurity, mental health effects, the labour shortage, the appeal of the job market and the brain drain. Without graduate students and post-doctoral fellows, there is no next generation, there is no science. Without science, there's no innovation, not to mention the loss of our scientific sovereignty.
The report entitled “Investing in Canada's Future: Strengthening the Foundations of Canadian Research”, more commonly known as the Naylor report, was commissioned by the Liberal government in 2016. The report flagged problems with Canada's scholarship ecosystem when it came out. They were known then.
Trying to make itself look good once again, the government commissioned a new report five years later. The “Report of the Advisory Panel on the Federal Research Support System”, known as the Bouchard report, came out on March 20, 2023. It, too, addressed the scholarship problem, saying this about government awards for university research trainees:
As a result, they have not kept pace with increases to the cost of living nor with research trainee compensation trends around the world. This situation has significantly eroded Canada's position as a global hub for the attraction and retention of research-enabled talent and this erosion will be accelerated by the increase in investments by our global peers.
I'm not making it up. It's in a report the government, itself, commissioned. I could go on and on, and of course, I could give you concrete examples to show why Canada is at the bottom of the pack and why action is so desperately needed.
Although I'm very glad that the committee is doing this study, I don't know how many more studies, reports, consultations and panels it will take for the government to understand this: if it doesn't do something now, it will be too late. Our neighbours and competitors are desperate to snap up the best and brightest. As you know, scientific research doesn't just happen in a tiny room in the dark. It happens on the world stage. While our competitors sprint ahead, we are crawling along at a leisurely pace.
Nevertheless, I'm going to ask some constructive questions about the current situation. They are for Mr. Lacroix.
I'm very glad you're here today, Mr. Lacroix.
You said the government needed to increase not only the amount of federal scholarships, but also funding for research overall. It's true that most students are funded not by federal scholarships, but by research grants provided to the professor they are working for.
If all the government did was increase the value of scholarship awards, how do you think it would affect those researchers?