Mr. Speaker, I rise on the occasion to debate the motion brought before the House by the hon. member for Vancouver East.
The hon. member is asking for substantial changes to the way the government supports post-secondary education. With all due respect, I do not think the hon. member has done her homework before presenting her motion. I will address her points individually.
The first point is proposed changes to the Canada student loans program. The hon. member says the government should reverse the privatization of Canada student loans.
The government has stressed from day one that partnerships are the key to ensuring strong economic and social provisions that will serve Canadians. We still believe that. As for the Canadian student loans program, we can go back to its inception in 1964 and find that the government of the day worked with private sector lenders to finance the Canadian student loans program. That is hardly a radical concept.
Prior to 1995 the Canadian student loans program provided students with financial assistance in the form of 100% government guaranteed loans from private sector lenders. These lenders financed and distributed the loans and were responsible for servicing and collecting them.
In theory this seems like a good system but in practice there was little incentive for lenders to maintain loans in good standing, to prevent defaults or to provide quality service to students. The result was a significant cost to the government.
Hon. members will recall that in the early part of this decade Canadian taxpayers insisted that we get our financial house in order, which we have done. Part of that necessary and beneficial process was to negotiate new financing arrangements for the Canada student loans program, which we did.
New arrangements were introduced in 1995. Under these new arrangements lenders assume responsibility for servicing and collecting the loans.
In return for the risk of loans not being repaid, the Government of Canada pays lenders a premium of 5% of the loan's face value when it goes into repayment. This is a much more favourable arrangement for Canadian taxpayers.
Before these new arrangements were implemented, the Government of Canada held over $1 billion in loans for which it had reimbursed lenders under the guaranteed loans provision, a rather costly situation and one that Canadians would no longer tolerate.
The hon. member may ask how the system is an improvement. As a transition to risk shared system progresses, the cost of claims for guaranteeing loans will decrease dramatically while the cost of the risk premium will increase only moderately.
For example, payments against loan guarantees are expected to decline from $382 million in the fiscal year 1996-97 to a more reasonable $67 million for the year 2000-2001.
But during the same period it is estimated that the risk premium will increase only from $200,000 in 1996-97, the year after risk sharing was implemented, to $73 million in the year 2000-2001.
If we were to adopt the hon. member's motion and reverse this process the result would be forfeiture of the projected savings and there would be a significant increase in costs regarding claims for guaranteed loans. Surely that is not what the hon. member wants.
The government has signed contracts with lenders. Changing these arrangements would mean breaking contracts or renegotiating them, both of which could prove very costly.
The hon. member's motion also calls on the government to reject proposals for income contingent loan repayment. If the hon. member had done even preliminary research she would know that after discussions with our provincial partners it was agreed that a system of income contingent loan repayment was not feasible.
The idea of income contingent loan repayment came about following reforms to the Canadian student loans program and the coming into force of the Canadian Student Loans Financial Assistance Act in 1995.
In the 1997 budget we again expressed our willingness to discuss the possibility of an income contingency repayment with interested provinces. The bottom line is that only the province of Ontario expressed interest and potential lenders were, shall we say, less than enthusiastic about participating in such a scheme.
Ontario and the lenders have not been able to come to an agreement and the Ontario government said an ICR plan would not be introduced by the 1999 deadline it had set.
Last November a national stakeholders working session on the Canada student loans program determined that an ICR scheme was not viable so the government has no intention of implementing an ICR system at this time.
I point out, however, that the February 1998 federal budget is sensitive to a student borrower's income. The budget announced a package of new measures, including interest relief changes and new grants.
For example, eligibility for interest relief is based on income. The 1998 budget increased the threshold for students to qualify for interest relief, extended the interest relief period over a longer period of time and introduced debt reduction measures to assist students in severe financial hardship.
The hon. member for Vancouver East is calling on the government to implement a federal student grant program. Where was the hon. member during the budget speech debate? Is she not aware of the Canada millennium scholarship fund and the Canada study grants? Both have been topics for discussion in this House on a number of occasions and both are student grant programs.
The Canada millennium scholarship fund will start off with an endowment of $2.5 billion from the Government of Canada. Over 10 years scholarships will assist more than 100,000 low and middle income students annually. Grants will average $3,000 a year.
The new Canada study grants for students with children and other dependants which came into effect on August 15 will help over 25,000 students this year alone. Other Canada study grants have been in effect for some time and include grants for certain female doctorate candidates, high need, part time students and students with permanent disabilities. The government is backing its commitment to Canada study grants with an allocation of $100 million in the upcoming fiscal year.
I trust these federal student grant programs will satisfy the hon. member who is also calling on the government to establish accessibility to a new national standard for post-secondary education. Again, accessibility has been a fundamental principle of the Canadian student loans program since its inception in 1964. That is some record. Not only that, but both federal and provincial governments have stated that accessibility should be the key principle in any joint programs offering student loans.
I also point out that since post-secondary is the responsibility of both federal and provincial governments, the Government of Canada cannot unilaterally declare a national standard, if that is what the hon. member is suggesting.
I encourage all hon. members to give the new provisions designed to help post-secondary students an opportunity and see how effective they will be. It is far too early to start considering amendments to these programs, and for that reason I cannot support the hon. member's motion.