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New Research on the Canada Learning Bond's Impact on Post-Secondary Education Savings Behaviour


The CST Foundation partnered with The Social Research and Demonstration Corporation (SRDC) to study the Canada Learning Bond's impact twenty years after its creation.

TORONTO, Feb. 20, 2024 /CNW/ - The CST Foundation (CST) and the Social Research and Demonstration Corporation (SRDC) today released new research designed to better understand the impact of the Federal Canada Learning Bond (CLB) program on Canadian families. Created in 2004, the CLB was designed to kick-start education savings for young Canadians from low-income households; to receive the CLB the eligible children must open a Registered Education Savings Plan ("RESP"). As an expert in education savings, CST identified a number of unanswered questions related to the CLB, and partnered with SRDC to answer them leveraging four Statistics Canada-managed data sources to.

The report seeks to answer three questions: 

The key findings from the study include:

"CST is a passionate advocate for ensuring that all Canadians have the financial resources to pursue post-secondary education" said Sherry MacDonald, President and CEO, CST Foundation. "We are proud of our history as the pioneers of education savings in Canada and will leverage this research to shape our dialogue with Federal and provincial governments. The research underscores the importance of our work to contribute to the public discussion of improving post-secondary education access. We remain dedicated to continuing to advance the goal of ensuring that all Canadians, regardless of their background, have access to important tools such as the Canada Learning Bond."

"The Canada Learning Bond is clearly not universally accessible, and many low-income children miss out on this education funding due to administrative and awareness barriers," said Reuben Ford, Research Director, SRDC. "Although a larger share of children in more recent birth cohorts have an RESP, we have found minimal evidence that initiatives like the CLB have narrowed the gap between RESPs held by lower- and higher-income children. While our findings point to interventions that could increase take up under the existing CLB policy framework, changes to the CLB policy itself may be needed to increase accessibility." 

Read the full report here.

About the Canadian Scholarship Trust Foundation

Founded in 1960, the Canadian Scholarship Trust Foundation is dedicated to helping Canadian families access post-secondary education. Through philanthropy, discovery, advocacy and by sponsoring the Canadian Scholarship Trust Plans to help families save for post-secondary education, CST continues to deliver on its mission. The Foundation rewards hard working and community minded Canadian students through scholarships, bursaries and awards programs. CST has helped over 800,000 students achieve their post-secondary dreams.

About SRDC

The Social Research and Demonstration Corporation (SRDC) is a non-profit research organization created to develop, field test, and rigorously evaluate new programs. Our two-part mission is to help policymakers and practitioners identify policies and programs that improve the well-being of all Canadians, with a particular concern for the effects on the disadvantaged, and to raise the standards of evidence used in assessing these policies. Since our establishment in December 1991, our SRDC team has conducted over 450 projects and studies for various federal and provincial departments, municipalities, and other public and non-profit organizations. We have offices in Ottawa and Vancouver and satellite offices in Calgary, Hamilton, Montreal, Regina, St. John's, Toronto, and Winnipeg.

SOURCE Canadian Scholarship Trust Foundation



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