Foreign students are being wooed to Ontario. An interesting article in the November 6, 2010 Toronto Sun.
The first recipients of Premier Dalton McGuinty’s new scholarship fund for international students will start school about a month before the next provincial election in the fall of 2011.
The bulk of the program’s cost — $30 million for the first four years — will be spent during the term of the next government.
PC Leader Tim Hudak, who’ll be leading the Conservatives against McGuinty’s Liberals into the next campaign, said he’ll keep fighting to have that money spent on Ontario students.
”The PCs have called for this $40,000 per year grant to foreign students to be cancelled and the funds put towards helping Ontario students access post secondary education instead,” Hudak said.
“Certainly this is a government that’s done a lot of backtracking and the PCs will continue to push to get Dalton McGuinty to back down from this latest bad idea.”
McGuinty announced the new Ontario Trillium Scholarship in Hong Kong this week as he wrapped up an official trip to China.
The international students will get $40,000 a year for four years for doctoral studies at a university in Ontario.
The plan is to start with 75 students next year, and then add an additional 75 a year to a maximum of 300 annual recipients.
When fully ramped up, the scholarship program will cost $12 million a year.
The proposal has drawn strong support from universities, but opposition MPPs at Queen’s Park have questioned the decision to go further into debt to help foreign students while many Ontarians continue to struggle through the lingering economic effects of the recession.
Ontario taxpayers will pay $20 million in the first four years, while universities pick up the remaining $10 million.
Hudak said it’s wrong to expect Ontarians to pick up the cost of the program plus interest payments on debt.
The McGuinty spring budget says the province won’t balance its books for eight years.
Training, Colleges and Universities Minister John Milloy said the scholarship program will allow provincial institutions to compete with the best universities in the world for the top minds.
Milloy said the amount put aside for the international scholarships is “small” compared to the government’s investment in financial support for Ontario students.
According to Statistics Canada, Ontario university undergraduates and graduate students face the highest tuition in the country.
Graduate students entering the 2010/11 academic year were walloped with a 10.6% increase in tuition, bringing the average yearly cost to $6,917.
Undergraduates saw their tuition leap by 5.4% to $6,307.
But international students often pay three times as much for the same education as Ontarians.
The Canadian Federation of Students issued a report in the fall of 2009 criticizing the high tuition faced by foreign students.
The federation accused governments of cutting back funding to universities, and then exploiting foreign students to help make up the difference.
According to the U of T website, undergraduate tuition for international students at the institution ranged from $20,000 to $26,000 in 2010-11.
However, a math undergraduate degree at one Australian university costs $29,862 (Canadian) a year and other programs can be considerably more expensive, according to information posted on line by the university.
antonella.artuso@sunmedia.ca
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Pre-paid credit cards
Dealing as often as I do with credit-challenged clients, I am often asked about pre paid credit cards. They do have their place, but there is absolutely no impact (good or bad) on your credit history. They seem suited to people who simply need a credit card for certain transactions (parking lots, internet purchases etc.) but who cannot qualify for a regular card. They can also be useful for gifts or for beginning the teaching process for young people under the age of 18.
I came across a very good article at Moneyville this week which was entitled " A primer on pre paid cards." With thanks to the original author, Jennifer Stewart, here it is below.
November 04, 2010 by Jennifer Stewart
With the Christmas season nearly upon us, many gift buyers are opting to forego overcrowded shopping malls and long lines, and are purchasing pre-paid credit cards instead.
“If you don’t feel like trying to beat the Christmas rush or giving somebody money, which can often seem impersonal, then pre-paid credit cards can be a great gift option,” said Leanne Di Pucchio, who has given and received a pre-paid credit card during the holidays. “It can also take the cringe out of returning a gift you’re never going to use.”
While a pre-paid credit card may give users endless shopping choice, the unique form of swipe-and-go-plastic comes with its own rules.
Not quite a gift card, debit or credit card, pre-paid credit cards allow consumers to load a pre-determined amount of money onto a card, which is then used at stores. It is impossible to go into debt using a pre-paid credit card because once the money is gone, the card doesn’t work until more is deposited. There are no bills and no interest charges.
“It is essentially the same as a debit card linked to a bank account, without the overdraft option,” said Margot Bourque, a financial security adviser with Maia & Associates.
Touted as an alternative to carrying cash and an effective budgeting tool, pre-paid credit cards have one major difference from regular credit cards: they don’t build credit. All money on the card is pre-paid, and therefore developing credit history is impossible.
“Your credit rating is the most important thing you can ever have. Financially speaking, it’s like gold,” said Bourque, who added that that getting mortgages and best rates is highly dependent on credit history. “If you can get credit, even the slightest amount, pre-paid credit cards are the card of last resort.”
Despite their disadvantages, pre-paid credit cards are heavily advertised during the holiday season to give your loved ones what they really want: the freedom to make their own purchases. During other times of the year, they are touted to parents as a budgeting tool, allowing parents to control how much their child spends and making it impossible to go into overdraft or unwanted debt. The cards also give parents a means of getting money to their child in a pinch.
Mark Shefner, 24, received a pre-paid credit card this year as a promotion from an eye-wear company pre-loaded with $100. The card, said Shefner, was useful — until he got to the last $10.
“Once the bulk of the money on the card was gone, I basically stopped using the card, except for parking now and then,” said Shefner. “It’s not something I would recommend to others. I would always use my credit card, or use cash.”
Contrary to common belief, some pre-paid credit cards come with protection, in the case of a lost or stolen card. All MasterCard prepaid cards carry the same security protection as other MasterCard payment cards including Zero Liability, which protects card holders from unauthorized purchases. Visa pre-paid cards are also protected through Visa’s Zero Liability policy providing users follow set-out rules, such as registering the card. Rules for pre-paid Visa cards vary per issuer.
In the rush of the Christmas season, a pre-paid card can allow users to take advantage of post-holiday shopping sales, and avoid long waits in return lines. But buyer beware, the swipe and go plastic is not what it appears.
“I think as long as people know that pre-paid credit cards are essentially gift cards, than they are fine,” said Di Pucchio. “I think the term pre-paid credit card is misleading, and may confuse some people come Christmas morning.”
I came across a very good article at Moneyville this week which was entitled " A primer on pre paid cards." With thanks to the original author, Jennifer Stewart, here it is below.
A primer on pre-paid credit cards
November 04, 2010 by Jennifer Stewart
With the Christmas season nearly upon us, many gift buyers are opting to forego overcrowded shopping malls and long lines, and are purchasing pre-paid credit cards instead.
“If you don’t feel like trying to beat the Christmas rush or giving somebody money, which can often seem impersonal, then pre-paid credit cards can be a great gift option,” said Leanne Di Pucchio, who has given and received a pre-paid credit card during the holidays. “It can also take the cringe out of returning a gift you’re never going to use.”
While a pre-paid credit card may give users endless shopping choice, the unique form of swipe-and-go-plastic comes with its own rules.
Not quite a gift card, debit or credit card, pre-paid credit cards allow consumers to load a pre-determined amount of money onto a card, which is then used at stores. It is impossible to go into debt using a pre-paid credit card because once the money is gone, the card doesn’t work until more is deposited. There are no bills and no interest charges.
“It is essentially the same as a debit card linked to a bank account, without the overdraft option,” said Margot Bourque, a financial security adviser with Maia & Associates.
Touted as an alternative to carrying cash and an effective budgeting tool, pre-paid credit cards have one major difference from regular credit cards: they don’t build credit. All money on the card is pre-paid, and therefore developing credit history is impossible.
“Your credit rating is the most important thing you can ever have. Financially speaking, it’s like gold,” said Bourque, who added that that getting mortgages and best rates is highly dependent on credit history. “If you can get credit, even the slightest amount, pre-paid credit cards are the card of last resort.”
Despite their disadvantages, pre-paid credit cards are heavily advertised during the holiday season to give your loved ones what they really want: the freedom to make their own purchases. During other times of the year, they are touted to parents as a budgeting tool, allowing parents to control how much their child spends and making it impossible to go into overdraft or unwanted debt. The cards also give parents a means of getting money to their child in a pinch.
Mark Shefner, 24, received a pre-paid credit card this year as a promotion from an eye-wear company pre-loaded with $100. The card, said Shefner, was useful — until he got to the last $10.
“Once the bulk of the money on the card was gone, I basically stopped using the card, except for parking now and then,” said Shefner. “It’s not something I would recommend to others. I would always use my credit card, or use cash.”
Contrary to common belief, some pre-paid credit cards come with protection, in the case of a lost or stolen card. All MasterCard prepaid cards carry the same security protection as other MasterCard payment cards including Zero Liability, which protects card holders from unauthorized purchases. Visa pre-paid cards are also protected through Visa’s Zero Liability policy providing users follow set-out rules, such as registering the card. Rules for pre-paid Visa cards vary per issuer.
In the rush of the Christmas season, a pre-paid card can allow users to take advantage of post-holiday shopping sales, and avoid long waits in return lines. But buyer beware, the swipe and go plastic is not what it appears.
“I think as long as people know that pre-paid credit cards are essentially gift cards, than they are fine,” said Di Pucchio. “I think the term pre-paid credit card is misleading, and may confuse some people come Christmas morning.”
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