Canada is in a productivity and execution crisis while the world is moving faster and becoming less forgiving. In this environment, delay weakens our economy and our ability to protect our interests.
Canada is still governing with habits built for calmer times. Other countries are making decisions quickly, accepting tradeoffs, and acting before everyone agrees.
We can meet this moment by moving at crisis speed: focusing on getting things built, changing expectations and shifting norms about how we do things, and bringing builders into the room so policy reflects real-world conditions. This shift requires action not just from governments, but from corporations, institutions, and Canadians themselves.

Canada is in a crisis.

Growth is weak. Productivity is stalled. Our ability to decide, build, and deliver has eroded, while the world around us is accelerating and fragmenting. In this environment, delay is not neutral. It is a liability that leaves us poorly positioned as a nation. 

This was the stark message that Prime Minister Mark Carney delivered to Canadians almost a year ago, when he swore in his first Cabinet after taking over the leadership of the Liberals from Justin Trudeau. To respond to this crisis, he promised Canadians “We’re focused on action.”

This memo reflects a growing concern among entrepreneurs, builders, and operators. Across all levels of government, in our corporations, and as citizens, Canada has not yet shifted enough from a peacetime mindset to an urgent, results-driven posture. We are not moving fast enough or with the intensity needed to meet the moment.

The Prime Minister acknowledged this reality in his recent address in Davos. The speech shared an uncomfortable truth: the world is changing faster, becoming more volatile, and less forgiving of hesitation. The statement that Canada must “take on the world as it is, not wait around for a world we wish to be” was both accurate and necessary.   

The same clarity must be applied to Canada’s domestic reality. 

We recommend three immediate shifts

We recommend three immediate shifts to every level of government, to corporations that invest and build here, and to Canadians who benefit from a stronger economy: 

First, focus relentlessly on domestic execution. 2026 must be the year we deliver. Canada’s sovereignty is secured through economic strength. To build this strength, we must deliver energy infrastructure, housing, transportation corridors, competitive tax structures, policy reform, digital systems, and industrial capacity with a sense of urgency not seen in decades. Delivery requires execution – the discipline of turning intentions into concrete actions and results. This means making decisions, not consulting about making decisions. It means signing committed contracts, not MOUs. It means approvals that lead to shovels in the ground, not endless studies. 

Second, change our norms and expectations. Sovereignty is not preserved by managing decline more politely than others. Attack the “culture of consultation”. Reset expectations so that decisions are made in days and weeks, not months or years. End government programs that don’t achieve results. Remove EDI requirements that slow down progress. Expedite dismissals for underperforming government executives. Expect and demand more from every Canadian. Be honest with Canadians about the hard choices required and the tradeoffs involved. Stop using “Canada just works this way” as an excuse. Leverage the full power of government to get things done. Accept that not everyone will be happy with this – the bigger risk is that we get left behind as we try to build a much more competitive economy.

Third, bring builders into the room. As Canada approaches critical trade negotiations and economic decisions, governments must engage directly with the businesses that operate across borders and supply chains. We’ve done this before - through initiatives like the CDL Rapid Screening Consortium in 2020 - and can do it again. Policy is strongest when it reflects commercial reality and we should find ways to ensure it’s not developed in isolation.

The World Won't Wait

We do not live in a world where time is abundant, where transitions are gentle, or where every risk can be fully mapped before action is taken. Competitor economies are executing at speed.  In a national productivity crisis driven by rules and regulations that create uncertainty and timelines that discourage capital investment, it’s fair to ask whether our systems are designed to deliver outcomes or preserve comfort.

As the Prime Minister has said: "This is not a transition. This is a rupture.”

History shows that Canada can do hard things when it faces danger. In World War II, during the fiscal crisis of the 1990s, and during the onset of COVID-19, our governments got serious. They did not seek to make everyone happy; they sought to survive and succeed. They acted at "crisis speed."

In those moments, Canada removed the signs from its windows and stopped pretending that rituals, slogans and procedural compliance were enough. The country acted on reality, not reassurance.  

We are in a moment when Canadians know what’s at stake. We applaud the efforts this federal government has made so far to do things like remove federal barriers to internal trade, fast track major projects, and streamline applications for R&D tax credits. But we must do more. Much more. And much faster. It’s amazing that we haven’t yet made our corporate and capital gains tax structures more competitive, accelerated project approval timelines and cut red tape across the board, or deployed private sector experts to support government

Steering Canada through this moment is an enormously difficult task – we understand that. The current federal government has now been in place for nearly a year. With Parliament back in session, this is an excellent moment to shift decisively from peacetime habits to a wartime posture. That does not mean abandoning values. It means aligning systems with urgency.

Builders face these choices constantly. When conditions change, adaptation is not optional. Decisions are made that upset stakeholders. Action is taken before consensus is complete. This is because responsibility demands hard choices.

Government is no different. Neither are corporations, institutions, or citizens. In a rupture, everyone adjusts or everyone pays the cost. 

The path forward is demanding and clear: accept the world as it is, and create the conditions for Canada to build.

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