It’s hard to compare these numbers to the Canadian experience because need assessment and provincial variation in programs means Canada doesn’t have a “typical” amount of student aid. But broadly speaking, the Swedish, Norwegian and Finnish packages look a lot like what low-income Canadian students will be getting next year, assuming the Liberals pass their proposed changes to student aid. The difference, of course, being our students pay tuition and theirs don’t.
So, this is not a bad deal, right? Free tuition, easy grants, loans, etc. Students have all their needs taken care of, so they must be really able to study hard, right? Wrong. In Norway and Iceland over two-thirds of students have some paid employment during the school year, in Denmark 62%, and in Sweden and Finland roughly half work. That’s about the same as Canada – but in most countries in the region the number of hours worked is significantly higher than the Canadian average, which is around 18 hours per week.
Figure 2: Median Weekly Hours Worked, Among Full-Time Students in Paid Employment
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