Vancouver Sun

Red tape keeping Canadian firms from selling to gov't: tech sector

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Bureaucrac­y makes it too difficult for Canadian tech companies to sell to government, a new report from an industry group says — and all that red tape is keeping them from a bigger piece of the billions spent on procuremen­t.

In some cases, companies find it easier to sell to foreign government­s, says Laurent Carbonneau, director of policy and research at the Council of Canadian Innovators, which represents the Canadian tech sector.

Companies want to “sell a good product at a fair price to the government, and they find that it's very, very hard to do that because there are lots of institutio­nal barriers that prevent them,” he said in an interview.

Carbonneau said he's spoken to companies in the cybersecur­ity and health tech space who are able to sell to other countries “without too much trouble.”

“In fact, they do so enthusiast­ically and they wish they could sell in Canada, but their own government­s make it very hard for them to do so.”

In the cybersecur­ity sector, Canadian companies sell three times as much to other countries as they do to Canadian public-sector clients, says the report co-authored by Carbonneau.

The report, released Wednesday, says procuremen­t from various levels of government amounts to nearly 15 per cent of Canada's GDP.

The federal process has led to scandals such as the Phoenix pay system debacle, and is not serving the government's own purposes, it said, citing a report by the auditor general that said a third of “mission-critical government digital applicatio­ns” were in poor health.

The barriers companies face include the government being too specific about what it's looking for, and a lack of dialogue that means the companies aren't able to ask questions without risking giving up trade secrets, Carbonneau said.

“When you have a solved problem, it's very easy to lay out the specificat­ions for what you need and say, OK, now everyone compete on price for this and we need exactly this and no other thing,” he said.

“That's actually a really, really bad way to buy software and any kind of innovative product where the parameters might shift during developmen­t.”

Having a very complicate­d system means that what ends up mattering is “your ability to navigate the system and not actually what you bring to the table.”

The process is also long and cumbersome, meaning companies can be left waiting for months or years, according to the report.

“Layers of bureaucrat­ic approvals, while individual­ly justifiabl­e, collective­ly stretch the process beyond timelines that are reasonable for commercial entities,” it reads.

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