Canada is entering a critical economic period. The next five to ten years are unlikely to be defined by a simple boom-or-bust story. The more likely outcome is a slower, more complicated decade in which the country continues to grow, but not fast enough to materially improve living standards unless productivity, investment, housing, and infrastructure execution improve.
On the surface, Canada still has many of the ingredients required for long-term prosperity. It has abundant natural resources, a highly educated workforce, political stability, a sound banking system, a credible central bank, deep trade ties with the United States, and significant opportunities in energy, critical minerals, agriculture, artificial intelligence, and advanced manufacturing. These are real advantages, and many countries would trade places with Canada in a second.
The problem is that Canada has not been converting those advantages into strong productivity growth. The country has relied too heavily on population growth, real estate, government spending, and household debt to drive economic activity. That model can produce positive headline GDP growth, but it does not necessarily make the average Canadian richer. In fact, much of the frustration Canadians feel today comes from that exact gap: the economy may appear to be growing in aggregate, while living standards, affordability, and per-capita income feel stagnant.
That is the central issue for Canada’s next decade. The question is not whether Canada can grow. It probably can. The question is whether Canada can grow in a way that raises real incomes, improves affordability, strengthens business investment, and increases the country’s long-term productive capacity.
The proposed Canada Strong Fund, described as Canada’s first sovereign wealth fund, fits directly into this debate. If it is run well, it could help mobilize private capital into major projects that Canada badly needs. If it is run poorly, it could become another politically branded pool of public money used to subsidize weak projects, reward favoured industries, or create the appearance of economic strategy without improving the underlying economy.
My view is that the Canada Strong Fund could be helpful, but it is not a magic solution. Canada’s problem is not a shortage of slogans, committees, or investment announcements. Canada’s problem is execution. The country needs to build faster, approve faster, invest more productively, and stop treating real estate appreciation as a substitute for economic development.
The Baseline Outlook: Modest Growth, Persistent Pressure
The most realistic baseline for Canada over the next five to ten years is modest economic growth. A reasonable expectation is real GDP growth somewhere in the range of 1.5% to 2% per year, with inflation gradually settling near the Bank of Canada’s 2% target, unemployment fluctuating in the mid-single digits to low-single digits, and interest rates remaining structurally higher than the near-zero period that followed the global financial crisis and the pandemic.
That is not a disastrous outlook, but it is not especially exciting either. It implies an economy that continues to function, but one that struggles to deliver strong improvements in living standards. The risk is that Canada muddles through: enough growth to avoid crisis, but not enough productivity improvement to make people feel materially better off.
The distinction between total GDP and GDP per capita matters here. Canada can increase total economic output simply by increasing the population. More people means more consumption, more workers, more renters, more borrowers, and more demand for goods and services. That can support headline GDP. But if the economy does not also produce more output per person, then Canadians do not become wealthier in a meaningful way.
This has been one of Canada’s core weaknesses. The country has often looked better at the aggregate level than at the household level. Population growth helped mask weak productivity growth. Housing wealth helped mask weak wage growth. Government spending helped mask weak private-sector investment. Those trends can continue for a while, but they are not a strong foundation for long-term prosperity.
Over the next decade, Canada will need to shift from a growth model based on adding more people and borrowing against housing wealth to one based on higher productivity, stronger capital investment, better infrastructure, and higher-value exports. That transition will not be easy, but it is necessary.
Productivity Is Canada’s Defining Economic Problem
Productivity is the most important economic issue facing Canada. It is also one of the least understood in public debate because it sounds abstract. In reality, productivity determines how wealthy a country can become over time. It influences wages, business competitiveness, government revenue, living standards, and the ability to fund public services.
A productive economy allows workers to produce more value per hour. That gives businesses more room to pay higher wages without simply raising prices. It gives governments a larger tax base without constantly increasing tax rates. It gives households more purchasing power. It also makes the economy more resilient because higher-productivity businesses can compete globally rather than depending only on domestic demand.
Canada’s productivity performance has been weak for years. This is not because Canadians are lazy or incapable. It is because the structure of the economy has encouraged too much capital to flow into housing and too little into machinery, technology, infrastructure, intellectual property, and export-oriented industries. Canada has also struggled with slow permitting, fragmented internal markets, regulatory complexity, and a business culture that often underinvests compared with U.S. peers.
The country has strong research universities and deep technical talent, especially in areas like artificial intelligence. But Canada has frequently failed to commercialize innovation at scale. Too often, Canadian talent, companies, and ideas are either acquired by foreign firms or leave for larger markets where capital is deeper and growth opportunities are stronger.
That pattern is costly. A country cannot build long-term wealth by educating talented people and then exporting the upside. Canada needs more domestic scale-ups, more business investment, more industrial capacity, and more globally competitive companies headquartered in Canada.
The next decade will be shaped by whether this changes. If productivity remains weak, Canada will likely continue to experience sluggish real income growth, strained public finances, and persistent affordability problems. If productivity improves, the country has a much better chance of delivering real gains in living standards.
Housing Will Remain a Major Economic Constraint
Housing is one of the largest constraints on Canada’s economic outlook. The country’s housing market has become too central to household wealth, bank lending, consumer confidence, and political debate. High home prices have made many existing homeowners wealthier on paper, but they have also created a serious affordability crisis for younger Canadians, new families, renters, and new entrants to the labour market.
The economic problem is not simply that housing is expensive. The deeper issue is that too much capital has been absorbed by real estate rather than being directed into productive business investment. A healthy housing market supports mobility, family formation, and community stability. An overheated housing market distorts the entire economy.
When households must spend too much of their income on housing, they have less money for consumption, saving, investing, and entrepreneurship. When young workers cannot afford to live near job centres, labour markets become less efficient. When investors see housing as the safest and most attractive asset class, capital flows away from businesses that might otherwise create jobs, exports, and productivity growth.
Over the next five to ten years, housing is unlikely to deliver the same easy gains it produced during the low-rate era. Interest rates may decline from recent peaks, but the near-zero-rate world is unlikely to return quickly. Mortgage renewals will continue to pressure households. Condo markets in some cities may remain weak, especially where investor demand was a major driver. At the same time, supply constraints, construction costs, land-use restrictions, and continued population growth will likely prevent a simple nationwide collapse.
The most likely outcome is an uneven housing market. Desirable detached homes in supply-constrained areas may hold up better. Investor-heavy condo segments may struggle. Rental demand should remain structurally strong, although rent growth may cool if supply improves and population growth moderates. Affordability will remain a major political issue because even a flat housing market does not automatically make homes affordable after years of price increases.
For Canada’s broader economy, the ideal outcome would not be a housing crash. It would be a long period where incomes grow faster than home prices, housing supply expands, and capital gradually shifts toward more productive uses. That would be healthier, but it would also require patience and policy discipline.
Household Debt and Consumer Spending
Canadian households remain highly indebted, which limits the upside for consumer-driven growth. High debt levels make the economy more sensitive to interest rates, employment conditions, and housing prices. When mortgage payments rise or renewals occur at higher rates, households have less disposable income for other spending. This affects retail, restaurants, travel, discretionary goods, and broader consumer confidence.
The Canadian consumer is not necessarily headed for collapse, but it is difficult to see households driving a major economic boom from here. Wage growth, job stability, interest rates, and housing values will all matter. If unemployment remains contained, households can probably continue adjusting. If unemployment rises materially, the pressure could become more serious.
The key risk is a negative feedback loop. If business investment slows, hiring weakens. If hiring weakens, consumers become more cautious. If consumers pull back, businesses become even more reluctant to invest. If housing also weakens during that period, household confidence and credit conditions could deteriorate further. That is not my base case, but it is a realistic downside scenario.
This is another reason productivity matters. A heavily indebted consumer sector cannot be the main growth engine forever. Canada needs more growth from investment, exports, innovation, infrastructure, and productive industries.
Energy and Resources Are Canada’s Strongest Cards
Canada’s strongest medium-term economic opportunities are likely in energy, natural resources, critical minerals, agriculture, and related infrastructure. These sectors are sometimes treated as old economy industries, but that framing is wrong. The world’s demand for energy, food, metals, fertilizer, uranium, electricity, and secure supply chains is not going away. If anything, the next decade may make these assets more valuable.
Artificial intelligence, data centres, electrification, defence spending, grid modernization, electric vehicles, battery production, and industrial reshoring all require massive amounts of energy and materials. Canada has many of the inputs the world needs: oil, natural gas, uranium, potash, copper, nickel, lithium, rare earth potential, hydroelectricity, nuclear expertise, agricultural capacity, and vast land resources.
The challenge is not the resource base. The challenge is Canada’s ability to build infrastructure, approve projects, attract capital, and get products to global markets. Canada has a long history of identifying major opportunities and then moving too slowly to fully capture them. LNG is a good example. Canada has enormous natural gas potential, especially in Western Canada, but the country has been slow to build export capacity relative to competitors.
If Canada can improve execution, energy and resources could be a major source of growth over the next decade. LNG exports could help diversify trade beyond the United States. Uranium and nuclear-related expertise could benefit from renewed global interest in nuclear power. Potash and agriculture could become more strategically important in a world focused on food security. Critical minerals could support battery, defence, and advanced manufacturing supply chains.
This is one area where the Canada Strong Fund could be useful. Major resource and infrastructure projects often require large upfront capital, long development timelines, regulatory certainty, Indigenous partnerships, and offtake agreements. A well-designed public investment fund could help de-risk projects and attract private capital. But the fund would need to be disciplined. It should support projects with clear economic value, not politically convenient announcements.
Trade and the United States Risk
Canada’s economic future remains deeply tied to the United States. This is both a strength and a vulnerability. Access to the U.S. market is one of Canada’s greatest advantages, but dependence on one dominant trading partner also creates risk.
The United States is becoming more protectionist and more strategic in its industrial policy. This matters for Canadian autos, steel, aluminum, energy, agriculture, critical minerals, manufacturing, and technology. Even when Canada receives exemptions or favourable treatment, uncertainty alone can delay investment. Businesses do not invest aggressively when they are unsure whether tariffs, rules-of-origin requirements, procurement restrictions, or political changes will affect their market access.
Over the next decade, Canada will need to manage this relationship carefully. The best-case scenario is that Canada benefits from North American reshoring, energy security, defence integration, critical minerals demand, and supply-chain diversification away from China. The worst-case scenario is that Canada becomes squeezed by U.S. protectionism while still lacking the scale and speed to compete globally on its own.
This makes export diversification important, but diversification is easier to talk about than to achieve. Geography, infrastructure, and existing business relationships all pull Canada toward the United States. To sell more to Europe and Asia, Canada needs ports, pipelines, LNG terminals, trade infrastructure, and faster project development. Again, the issue comes back to execution.
AI and Technology Could Be the Upside Surprise
Artificial intelligence could become one of the most important productivity opportunities for Canada over the next decade. Canada has strong AI research credentials and a meaningful base of technical talent. The question is whether that advantage can be translated into business adoption and commercial scale.
AI is not just a technology-sector story. It can improve productivity across finance, logistics, software development, legal services, accounting, marketing, customer support, health administration, manufacturing, mining, energy, and small business operations. If Canadian firms adopt AI effectively, it could help offset labour shortages, reduce administrative costs, improve decision-making, and increase output per worker.
The risk is that Canada once again becomes a place where research talent is developed but the largest commercial gains accrue elsewhere. That has happened before. Canadian universities and researchers produce valuable innovation, but U.S. companies often have deeper capital pools, larger markets, and more aggressive commercialization cultures.
For Canada, the AI opportunity is less about producing another academic success story and more about widespread business adoption. Small and medium-sized businesses need to use AI to become more efficient. Large Canadian firms need to invest seriously in automation and data infrastructure. Governments need to modernize service delivery. If AI adoption remains shallow, the productivity impact will disappoint.
This is another area where public capital could help, but only indirectly. The government should not try to pick every AI winner. A better role would be to support compute infrastructure, procurement modernization, commercialization pathways, and adoption by industries where Canada already has strengths, such as finance, energy, logistics, agriculture, and health systems.
What Is the Canada Strong Fund?
The Canada Strong Fund has been described as Canada’s first sovereign wealth fund, with an initial size of $25 billion over three years. Its stated purpose is to invest alongside private capital in major Canadian projects and companies, particularly in areas considered strategic to the national economy.
It is important to be precise about what this fund is and what it is not. A traditional sovereign wealth fund, such as Norway’s, is primarily a savings and investment vehicle. Norway takes resource revenues and invests heavily outside the country to preserve wealth for future generations, diversify national assets, and avoid overheating the domestic economy.
The Canada Strong Fund appears to be different. It is less like a classic savings fund and more like a domestic strategic investment fund. Its purpose is not simply to save excess resource wealth for future generations. Its purpose is to mobilize capital into Canadian projects.
That difference matters. A domestic investment fund carries higher political risk. It is more exposed to lobbying, regional pressure, industrial policy mistakes, and weak project selection. It may still be useful, but it requires strong governance and investment discipline.
If the fund is run like a serious institutional investor, it could help. If it is run like a political announcement machine, it will likely destroy value.
How the Canada Strong Fund Could Help
The strongest argument for the Canada Strong Fund is that Canada has many projects that are economically important but difficult to finance through private markets alone. Major infrastructure, energy, mining, transportation, and industrial projects often involve large upfront costs, long timelines, regulatory uncertainty, and coordination problems. Private investors may hesitate even when the long-term national benefit is clear.
A public investment fund can help by absorbing some early-stage risk, taking minority equity positions, providing patient capital, and creating confidence for private co-investors. If one dollar of public capital attracts several dollars of private capital into productive projects, the fund could have a meaningful multiplier effect.
The fund could also help Canada capture more upside from public support. Too often, governments provide grants, subsidies, or tax credits without receiving much direct financial upside if the project succeeds. Equity investment changes that. If taxpayers take risk, they should have a chance to participate in returns.
The best uses of the fund would likely be projects that expand Canada’s productive capacity: ports, rail, transmission lines, LNG infrastructure, critical mineral processing, nuclear supply chains, grid modernization, agricultural infrastructure, defence-industrial capacity, and strategic technologies connected to real commercial demand.
These are not glamorous in the short term, but they matter. They determine whether Canada can export more, produce more, and compete globally. A fund that helps build these assets could make the economy stronger over time.
The fund could also provide a more strategic tool for national economic policy. Other countries are already using public capital aggressively to secure supply chains, support domestic industries, and attract investment. Canada cannot be naive about that. A purely hands-off approach may leave the country disadvantaged in sectors where competitors are using state-backed capital to move faster.
How the Canada Strong Fund Could Hurt
The risks are serious. The biggest risk is political capture. Once a large pool of public money exists, industries, regions, companies, and political actors will compete to influence where it goes. If investment decisions are driven by electoral incentives rather than economic merit, the fund will underperform.
The second risk is that the fund crowds out private capital rather than attracting it. If public money simply replaces private investment that would have happened anyway, taxpayers take risk without creating much additional economic activity. The fund should be judged by whether it creates incremental investment, not by the size of its announcements.
The third risk is poor pricing. Governments can overpay when they are motivated by job creation, regional politics, or headline value. A bad investment does not become good simply because it is called strategic. If the fund consistently accepts below-market returns without clear public benefits, it becomes a subsidy program with extra steps.
The fourth risk is duplication. Canada already has many public financing institutions and programs, including the Canada Infrastructure Bank, Export Development Canada, the Business Development Bank of Canada, tax credits, loan guarantees, and sector-specific funding programs. If the Canada Strong Fund adds another layer of bureaucracy without simplifying the system, it could make the investment environment more confusing rather than more effective.
The fifth risk is fiscal illusion. Borrowing money to invest in domestic projects can be justified if the returns are strong and the projects improve national productivity. But it is still risk. Calling something an investment fund does not eliminate taxpayer exposure. If the assets perform poorly, the public bears the cost.
The sixth risk is inflation in constrained sectors. If Canada pushes more capital into construction, infrastructure, and resource development without addressing labour shortages, permitting delays, and supply bottlenecks, the result could be higher project costs rather than more output. Money alone does not build things. Skilled labour, approvals, materials, management capacity, and political discipline are also required.
What Would Make the Fund Successful?
The Canada Strong Fund should be judged by a few clear tests.
First, it should attract private capital rather than replace it. A successful fund should have a strong co-investment ratio. If public money is consistently accompanied by significant private investment, that is a good sign. If projects depend mostly on government money, that is a warning sign.
Second, it should invest in productive assets, not political theatre. The fund should prioritize projects that improve Canada’s export capacity, infrastructure, energy security, industrial base, or productivity. Temporary job creation is not enough. The real question is whether the project leaves Canada with more long-term productive capacity.
Third, governance must be independent and transparent. The fund needs professional investment management, public reporting, clear return targets, conflict-of-interest rules, and protection from short-term political pressure. Without that, it will become vulnerable to lobbying and regional favouritism.
Fourth, the fund should recycle capital. If investments succeed, returns should be reinvested into future projects. That is how the fund can become a durable national asset rather than a one-time spending program.
Fifth, the fund must be paired with faster approvals. This point is crucial. Capital is not the only bottleneck in Canada. In many cases, the larger problem is that projects take too long to approve and build. If permitting timelines remain slow, the fund will not solve much. It may simply finance projects that remain stuck in the same system.
The Most Likely Economic Scenarios
Over the next decade, Canada’s economy likely falls into one of three broad scenarios.
The base case is slow growth. Canada avoids a major crisis, inflation remains mostly under control, unemployment rises and falls within a manageable range, and GDP continues to expand modestly. However, productivity growth remains weak, housing affordability improves only slowly, and living standards disappoint. This is the most likely outcome.
The upside case is a productivity and investment revival. Canada speeds up approvals, attracts more private capital, builds major energy and infrastructure projects, adopts AI across industries, expands exports, and uses the Canada Strong Fund effectively. In this scenario, real GDP growth improves, business investment strengthens, and per-capita income begins to recover. This is possible, but it requires policy discipline and execution that Canada has not consistently demonstrated.
The downside case is stagnation with financial stress. Trade uncertainty increases, U.S. protectionism hurts Canadian exporters, unemployment rises, households pull back, housing weakens, and business investment remains poor. Public finances deteriorate as governments spend more to offset weakness. This is not inevitable, but it is a real risk if external shocks hit while domestic productivity remains weak.
My probability estimate would be roughly 55% base case, 25% upside case, and 20% downside case. Canada has enough strengths to avoid a collapse, but not enough current momentum to assume a strong decade without major improvement.
The Bottom Line
Canada’s next decade will probably be defined by whether the country can move from a population-and-housing growth model to a productivity-and-investment growth model. That is the real economic transition.
The Canada Strong Fund could help, but it is not large enough or powerful enough to fix the economy by itself. It should be viewed as a tool, not a solution. Used well, it could attract private capital, support major projects, expand export capacity, and give taxpayers a stake in productive national assets. Used poorly, it could become another politically driven subsidy program that adds debt, duplicates existing institutions, and fails to improve productivity.
The fund’s success will depend on discipline. It needs independent governance, transparent reporting, serious investment standards, and a focus on projects that raise Canada’s long-term productive capacity. It should not exist to create press releases. It should exist to build assets.
Canada has the resources, talent, geography, and institutional stability to perform much better than it has. But the country needs to stop confusing activity with progress. More programs, more announcements, and more spending do not automatically create prosperity.
Productive investment creates prosperity. Faster execution creates prosperity. Higher output per worker creates prosperity. Export capacity creates prosperity. Infrastructure creates prosperity.
That is the challenge for Canada over the next five to ten years. The country does not need to reinvent itself completely. It needs to use its advantages properly.
If Canada can do that, the next decade could be better than the pessimists expect. If it cannot, the country will likely remain stable but frustrating: rich in assets, slow in execution, and weaker in living standards than it should be.