Canada can’t build prosperity on political promises
Governments can announce projects all they want. But without more workers and faster project approvals, economic growth is a pipe dream
Governments can announce projects all they want. But without more workers and faster project approvals, economic growth is a pipe dream
Inflation and supply chains aren’t the whole story. Government red tape is quietly adding costs that end up in the cost of food
The issue isn’t whether CEOs should use AI. The issue is whether they can afford not to
The benefits of artificial intelligence are front and centre. The risks barely make the brochure
And that is leaving Canadians facing some of the fastest-rising food costs in the G7
Ending the conflict was the easy part. Rebuilding shipping routes, oil inventories and market confidence will be much harder
Skilled trades offer the security and growth that office jobs no longer provide
Ottawa is investigating grocery competition, but market concentration is only a small part of the reason your food bill is so high
Canada has spent years delaying projects in the name of the environment. The economic costs are becoming impossible to ignore
If the Liberals were serious about lowering your grocery bills, they would focus on the true drivers of food affordability rather than empty spending promises
Ottawa’s electricity plan relies on hollow demand forecasts and a proven track record of budget-busting failures by Crown corporations
We can unlock a new wave of productivity by making entrepreneurship a public priority
The “gravy plane” is gone, but taxpayers shouldn’t be on the hook for Ford’s $190,000 aviation blunder