In Canada’s attempts to reach around the world to build ties to emerging powers, one of the most important initiatives is coming from Canadian universities lured by the pot of gold in India’s millions of bright young students.
Vast numbers of young Indians demanding a middle-class lifestyle and university education face a shortage of quality schools in their own country. And while Canadian universities were slow off the mark a decade ago, they are now rushing to recruit those students, to create joint study or research programs with universities in India, and even build campuses there.
The world is courting India. Canada is warming ties after decades of chill with New Delhi, and seeking a free-trade deal with the emerging economic power. And Canadian universities offer something valuable to both India and Canada: by educating thousands here, or in joint programs with India, the schools could build ties that spark business for decades, as well as deepen political ties.
That’s if Indian students actually know those Canadian universities exist.
Vaibhav Agarwal, a bio-engineering student at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur, came to the University of British Columbia for a summer internship offered through the non-profit research organization Mitacs, because teachers told him of a hidden gem.
“They said Canadian universities are doing some good research, but the only thing is that they are not very much publicized,” said Mr. Agarwal, 22.
Two of his friends went to the United States, to Cornell and Purdue universities. Indian students who can’t afford or can’t get a spot at a top Indian school go to lower-ranked universities, some with poor reputations. The demand is obvious: India has 550 million people under 25, according to a 2009 report from India’s National Knowledge Commission. The country has 350 universities, but needs about 1,500 more by 2015.
And of the 160,000 Indian students at universities abroad, only 3,000 are in Canada.
Attracting more of those students could have a huge impact: A study commissioned by Canada’s federal government found the 90,000 foreign students in Canada bring in $6.5-billion a year, more than exports of softwood lumber or coal.
“There’s a market moment for Canada,” said Paul Davidson, president of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada.
Universities are moving to seize it now. York University’s Schulich School of Business just announced plans to build a campus in Hyderabad. The University of Waterloo is exploring the possibility of its own Indian campus. UBC, the University of Toronto, Carleton University and the University of Alberta, among others, have Indian strategies. Many are launching joint research or study programs, so students can do half their degree at an Indian university and half in Canada, and are stepping up efforts to recruit students to come here.
In November, 15 Canadian university officials went to India. This month, more than 40 senior Indian and Canadian university leaders, and government officials from both sides, attended a Canada-India education summit at Carleton.
For Canadian universities, India’s demand offers many benefits. Faced with capped domestic tuitions and dwindling student demographics, foreign students provide revenues to expand academic programs. Sharp minds are available: 100,000 Indians qualified for India’s top-notch institutes can’t get a spot. Research and faculty links boost university reputations and help attract joint projects or bring talent here. Joint programs help Canadian universities offer Indians experience big multinational employers want.
Doing so could also build broader ties. Canada’s relations with New Delhi were chilly for 30 years after the country exploded a nuclear bomb using Canadian technology, and hindered also by Sikh extremism and the Air India bombing. They’re warming now, but at a time when everyone is courting India’s government.
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