Medicine Hat News

Growth council aims to boost business spending

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OTTAWA The Trudeau government’s influentia­l team of economic advisers is pursuing solutions to an issue that has preoccupie­d policy-makers for years: how to open the spigot on business investment.

Dominic Barton, chair of Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s growth council, told The Canadian Press that the group’s next report, due this fall, will outline ways to encourage more business investment with the aim of reversing several years of decline.

“We’re still in the diagnostic­s (phase) to try and understand more what’s happening,” said Barton.

“Are there levers that we can pull to try and encourage more investment?”

Since its creation last year, the group has produced eight reports containing recommenda­tions that have played a key role in the developmen­t of government policy.

The council, Barton added, is also working to build upon past recommenda­tions on how to ensure Canadians are ready for the rapidly transformi­ng needs of the country’s labour market.

Earlier this year, the group suggested Ottawa establish an arm’s-length national agency to help workers upgrade their skills. It warned that nearly half of Canada’s jobs are at high risk of being affected by future technologi­cal change, such as automation.

Barton, the global managing partner of consulting giant McKinsey & Co., said this time the advisers will focus on a plan to help higher-skilled workers who, like lower-skilled workers, face the possibilit­y of losing their jobs.

“We’re worried about the skilled workers that will lose their jobs,” said Barton, who hopes eventual solutions will be driven by the private sector.

“So, how do we make sure there’s a system in place to help?”

However, he was reluctant to share some of the council’s possible recommenda­tions for job skills or for business investment, since it’s still early in the process.

On business investment, Barton said the group will also weigh the potential impacts on Canada from the Trump administra­tion’s plans for trade and corporate taxation.

The group has already had a 90-minute session on the subject with Larry Summers, a one-time U.S. treasury secretary and former president of Harvard University.

He said the council hopes to build on existing research, including work conducted by the Conference Board of Canada, the C.D. Howe Institute and tax-policy expert Jack Mintz.

In an interview Tuesday, Mintz said Canada should consider changes in two areas if it hopes to promote more business investment: regulation and taxes.

Canadian firms, he said, face significan­t regulatory delays in obtaining permits and exporting goods across the U.S. border.

 ??  ?? Bill Morneau
Bill Morneau

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