April 23, 2026
Canada is not failing because we lack resources.We are underperforming because we are not using them wisely.
A Civic Call to Convert Strength Into Prosperity
Canada is not a poor country. It is not lacking in resources, talent, or opportunity.
We are a nation rich in energy, minerals, forests, water, and agricultural capacity. We have access to the largest consumer market in the world to the south, growing markets in Asia, and established trade relationships with Europe. These are advantages that many countries spend decades trying to build.
Yet despite these strengths, Canadians increasingly feel a growing strain.
Wages struggle to keep pace with living costs. Housing affordability remains under pressure. Business investment is cautious. Productivity growth lags behind peer nations.
The issue is not poverty. The issue is performance.
A Nation of Resources and With Slipping Results
Canada’s economic challenge is not a lack of assets. It is a failure to fully convert those assets into productivity and prosperity.
Canada remains one of the world’s most resource-rich nations, yet per-person economic growth has stagnated in recent years while national debt pressures have increased.
This creates a paradox:
A wealthy country can still experience declining living standards if productivity does not keep pace.
That is the reality Canada now faces.
The Energy and Infrastructure Bottleneck
One of the clearest examples of underperformance can be seen in Canada’s energy sector.
Canada exports roughly $140 billion in crude oil annually to the United States and supplies about 60 percent of total U.S. crude imports, making it the largest foreign supplier of oil to the American market.
At the same time:
- Canada produces about 4.6 million barrels of oil per day
- But has refining capacity of only 1.7 million barrels per day
This gap forces Canada to export raw resources and import refined products, not because of scarcity, but because of infrastructure limitations.
Canada exports energy. Canada imports energy.
Not due to lack of supply, but due to lack of capacity.
That is not an economic failure. It is an infrastructure constraint.
Productivity: The Real Measure of National Performance
Economic strength is not measured by how much a country produces in total.
It is measured by how much value each worker produces.
Canada’s core economic problem is not lack of activity, it is low output per worker compared with peer nations.
When productivity stagnates:
- wages grow more slowly
- living standards weaken
- public finances become strained
- economic resilience declines
In simple terms, the country works harder but gains less.
Why It Feels Like Decline
The feeling of economic decline in Canada is not caused by a single policy or government decision.
It is the result of several pressures arriving at the same time.
These pressures include:
- weak productivity growth
- population growth outpacing infrastructure development
- housing costs absorbing income gains
- resource bottlenecks limiting export capacity
- policy uncertainty affecting investment decisions
Individually, each factor is manageable. Together, they create a persistent drag on national performance.
The Hidden Cost of Regulation and Red Tape
Another major contributor to underperformance is the growing burden of regulation.
In 2024, Canadian businesses spent an average of 735 hours per year complying with government regulations — the equivalent of 92 working days. Of those hours, approximately 256 hours were spent specifically on red tape, defined as excessive or poorly designed regulation that provides little public benefit.
The financial cost is equally significant.
Government regulation now costs Canadian businesses approximately $51.5 billion annually, with nearly $18 billion attributed to unnecessary administrative burden.
These figures represent lost productivity.
Time that could have been spent:
- hiring workers
- expanding operations
- improving services
- investing in innovation
Instead, that time is spent navigating administrative processes.
Small Businesses Carry the Heaviest Burden
Small businesses, the backbone of Canada’s economy, face the greatest regulatory pressure.
Businesses with fewer than five employees pay regulatory costs per worker more than five times higher than large firms.
The consequences are significant.
Nearly 68 percent of business owners report they would not recommend starting a business today due to regulatory burden.
That statistic is more than an economic signal.
It is a warning about the future of entrepreneurship.
Canada’s Real Challenge: Converting Strength Into Growth
Canada possesses extraordinary advantages:
- natural resources
- skilled workers
- stable institutions
- global market access
But these strengths are not automatically converted into prosperity.
Canada has strong assets, but weak conversion mechanisms.
It is like owning a gold mine but struggling to build the roads needed to reach it.
The problem is not capacity.
The problem is coordination.
The Opportunity Hidden Inside the Problem
Canada’s situation is not irreversible.
In fact, the solutions are practical and achievable.
Reducing unnecessary regulatory burden alone could free up approximately:
- 268 million hours of productive time
- the equivalent of 137,000 full-time jobs across the economy
Similarly, improving infrastructure, expanding energy export capacity, and aligning population growth with housing and investment could significantly improve productivity and living standards.
Progress does not require radical change.
It requires disciplined execution.
Two Possible Futures for Canada
Canada now faces a clear choice between two economic paths.
Scenario A: Drift
If current trends continue:
- economic growth remains slow
- wages rise modestly
- housing remains expensive
- investment remains cautious
- public finances face increasing pressure
Canada would continue to function, but with declining momentum.
Scenario B: Build
If productivity, infrastructure, and regulatory efficiency improve:
- economic growth strengthens
- wages rise more steadily
- housing affordability improves
- investment increases
- public finances stabilize
Opportunity expands.
Confidence returns.
Growth becomes sustainable.
Responsibility: The Deciding Factor
Canada’s future will not be determined by ideology.
It will be determined by responsibility.
Responsible governance means:
- setting clear priorities
- maintaining predictable policies
- building necessary infrastructure
- managing regulation efficiently
- aligning growth with capacity
These are not political objectives.
They are management responsibilities.
The Bottom Line
Canada is not poor. Canada is capable. Canada is strong.
But strength alone does not guarantee prosperity.
Performance requires discipline. Growth requires coordination. Success requires responsibility.
The true measure of a nation is not the wealth it possesses, but the wisdom with which it uses it.
Closing
Canada’s future will not be decided by ideology, slogans, or short-term politics. It will be decided by how responsibly we manage the assets we already possess.
We do not need more promises. We need better performance.
Canada is not poor. Canada is capable.
What happens next depends on whether we choose discipline over drift — and responsibility over complacency.

