If you’ve paid any attention to the NDP leadership race, you’ll know that the classic issue of free tuition has been bandied about with wild abandon, but no more enthusiastically than by Niki Ashton as she tries to bring Bernie Sanders-like excitement to the topic. The problem? That she’s ignoring some of the realities of the promise, for which Alex Usher took her to task over the Twitter Machine over the long weekend.
There are 17 countries in the world that offer free tuition to students. It's time we do the same #ndpldr https://t.co/eSvXzlvBmS pic.twitter.com/KEQPSl8nas
— Niki Ashton (@nikiashton) August 3, 2017
Also, I'd be curious to know which 17 she's talking about. Most "free tuition" countries also have robust private HE sectors. https://t.co/GTLiHiUpGt
— Alex Usher (@AlexUsherHESA) August 3, 2017
Russia has "free tuition". Free-ness is rationed by academic merit. Don;t do well enough on exams you can still go but pay a market price.
— Alex Usher (@AlexUsherHESA) August 3, 2017
Sweden has free tuition. It turns away one student from uni for every one it admits. https://t.co/8bEdNq4XIB
— Alex Usher (@AlexUsherHESA) August 3, 2017
Deeply curious which of these models @nikiashton wants to imitate.
— Alex Usher (@AlexUsherHESA) August 3, 2017
What Usher demonstrates here is that while it’s all well and good to promise free tuition, it comes with trade-offs, which is the reality in the countries where it is offered, and which Ashton refuses to discuss in her statements. You can’t give free tuition to everyone while maintaining the same level of access and quality instruction or institutions writ-large. There are other non-monetary resources that are finite, which this facile “free tuition is the solution!” boosterism ignores, and should be discussed if this is to be a seriously discussed issue and not just a vapid slogan, borrowing from American discourse without acknowledging the differences in Canada as so many of the Bernie Bro slogan appropriation has been.