AliceL said:
Exactly! As an international student, I paid 35 000$ for a 2-year degree! That's a pretty important sum of money that I brought to a Canadian university. I was also working while studying and I was paying taxes. Afterwards, I worked for one year and a half as a temporary worker while waiting for my PR and I paid a lot of taxes! All of this while having access to NONE of the benefits that PRs and citizens have access to. So, I'm sorry, but yes we are entitled to pre-PR credit! It is our right and it's owed to us. And yes I do believe that we contribute more than someone who comes here as PR, enrolls in a university, gets government loans and scholarships to study while waiting for their citizenship and once they get it they leave Canada. These are the Canadians of Convenience that led to the introduction of the controversial 4/6 and intent to reside rules through Bill C24 (which I'm of course against). I'm sorry to say that I know a lot of people who do this and intend to do it.
I don't want to derail this thread any further- but you do understand that everybody has a different perspective about their contribution.
For instance, there are way more home owners who are PR's than students (the first thing my realtor asked me was if I was a PR/Citizen- that makes it easier to qualify for a mortgage)- and as a home owner, we pay property tax.
Also most of the PR's work and pay income tax.
So you might think your 35K might be a big sum- but most of the PR's pay more than that in taxes.
So it's not exactly an open and shut argument.
edit: also could you list some benefits that is available only for PRs and citizens? For instance, I was under the impression that temp workers are also eligible for OHIP. And loans are loans, not exactly a benefit- it needs to be repaid, right? I am asking because despite the taxes I have happily paid for the quality of life I am enjoying, i have not availed any benefits as such- so i just want to make sure I am not missing out on any!