Auditor finds $2.4B in unpaid student loans, calls for stronger recovery efforts
OTTAWA — Canada’s auditor general has called for the federal government to step up its recovery of outstanding student loans to keep taxpayers from being left on the hook after discovering that $2.4 billion in such loans were in default last year.
The finding is in one of several reports tabled in Parliament on Wednesday, which included a scathing assessment of the military’s resupply system and concerns around how the Canadian Commercial Corporation considered human rights in deals with foreign countries.
That Crown corporation was responsible for inking the $14-billion deal in 2014 to sell Canadian-made armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia, which has since become a lightning rod of controversy due to Saudi Arabia’s poor human-rights record.
The auditor’s review of the federal government’s student-loan programs cited a number of problems with measures intended to help those unable to repay what they borrowed, starting with a failure to assess whether those asking for loan relief actually qualified.


