McGill fined $2 million by Quebec government for hiking tuition

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MONTREAL - Montreal's McGill University will be fined more than $2 million for having drastically raised the tuition fees for its MBA program without the permission of the Quebec government.
The provincial government announced Monday that the top-ranked university will see its public subsidy cut by roughly $2.1 million this year.
In a province with the lowest tuition rates in Canada and a decade-long freeze on fee hikes, McGill has been pushing back.
Last September, McGill began charging $29,500 in annual tuition for its two-year MBA program — nearly nine times higher than provincial limit that caps tuition at around $3,400 per year.
McGill has said in the past that it needs the extra cash to make its program competitive with others in Canada and the United States.
The Quebec government says McGill's move broke provincial rules and lowered accessibility to the program.
"This downward adjustment will be applied until the situation returns to normal," Education Minister Line Beauchamp said in a statement.
"I still have a hard time, however, accepting that reducing this subsidy will have an effect on the quality of services offered to students."
University officials declined to comment, saying they would respond on Tuesday.
McGill plans to increase the business administration master's rate by another $3,000 next year. In order to charge the higher rates, McGill has given up the public funding it receives for the MBA program.
The move follows a similar one by Queen's University, which privatized its MBA program in the 1990s, allowing it to set tuition rates higher than provincial limits.
Several other MBA programs, including those at the universities of Toronto and Western Ontario, have since followed suit.
McGill</a> fined $2 million by Quebec government for hiking MBA tuition 900 per cent - Yahoo! News

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<p>So who's right here, the provincial government or the university?</p>

<p>The university is right.</p>

<p>The government of Quebec has underfunded its universities for years compared to universities in other Canadian provinces. Part of the reason is that students/faculty at the French universities don’t have much choice. If they want to study/work in French, they pretty much have no other choice. Students/faculty who want to study/work in English have choices all across Canada and are not limited to Quebec’s three English universities. In short, French Quebecers are a captive audience.</p>

<p>The Quebec government also enforces the same tuition and subsidy to all universities regardless of whether they are research universities of primarily teaching institutions.</p>

<p>McGill privatized its MBA and was not requesting a subsidy from the government. Private is a dirty word to the Quebec government. Everything has to be under the control of the government which micromanages every detail. Market forces are irrelevant. Somehow McGill is supposed to run an MBA program wth $14,000/year tuition plus grant when University of Toronto has $35,000/year to spend on its students. Other Quebec universities were hoping to follow suit but that will not be likely now.</p>

<p>The government says it is trying to maintain access but it is increasingly an access to mediocrity.</p>

<p>This is McGill’s official response:</p>

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