Asian Journal

Canadian innovation falling behind U.S. and other developed countries, despite billions in government programs

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Vancouver: Canada’s innovation performanc­e has declined in recent years and is falling further behind the U.S. and other developed countries, despite decades of costly innovation programs by successive federal government­s, finds a new study released today by the Fraser Institute, an independen­t, non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank. In fact, the current federal government allocated a staggering $8.2 billion to various innovation programs in its 2017 budget to encourage venture capital investment and create innovation superclust­ers, among other things. “Canada’s relatively poor innovation performanc­e over a rath- er long period of time suggests that these government-dominat- ed, top-down programs don’t work,” said Steven Globerman, Fraser Institute resident scholar, professor emeritus at Western Washington University and co-author of Innovation in Canada: An Assessment of Recent Experience.

The study finds that Canada’s innovation performanc­e has deteriorat­ed recently compared to the U.S. and other developed countries.

In fact, Canada’s relative ranking on the Global Innovation Index and the Global Competitiv­eness Report—two key innovation indices—is the lowest it has been since 2011 and 2008, respective­ly.

That means the innovation gap between Canada and other developed countries is growing. Crucially, innovation— developing new products or new ways of doing things—is key to increasing productivi­ty and raising living standards for all Canadians.

“Clearly, the bureaucrat­ic top-down approach to fostering innovation has failed despite the many billions Canadian taxpayers have paid for these programs over the years,” Globerman said.

“Government­s should focus on creating the right economic conditions within which entreprene­urs and businesses are incented to pursue innovation on their own.”

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