Canada’s Stall: Why We’re Stuck and How We Can Get Moving Again
For generations, Canada has been seen as a land of opportunity, a place where hard work and big dreams could build a prosperous future. Yet, a growing sense of unease is settling over the nation. From the soaring cost of living to the crumbling state of our public services and a pervasive feeling of economic stagnation, many Canadians are asking a difficult question: Why does it feel like we’re going backwards?
Having lived and worked on three different continents, I’ve witnessed firsthand the dynamism and drive that propels other nations forward. This unique perspective has crystallized a central argument: Canada is not facing a simple run of bad luck or a temporary downturn. We are grappling with a deep-seated culture of complacency that is preventing us from thriving in the 21st century.
The Complacency Trap: A Nation Resting on Its Laurels
Canada is blessed with an abundance of natural resources, a highly educated populace, and a stable political system. For decades, we have ridden on the coattails of these advantages. However, these very blessings have bred a dangerous sense of satisfaction. We have become a country that manages its problems instead of solving them.
This complacency manifests in several critical areas of our national life. We see it in our reluctance to embrace bold change, our tolerance for bureaucratic inertia, and a pervasive risk-aversion that stifles innovation. While other countries are aggressively building for the future, we are often content to patch up the present. This isn’t about a lack of talent or potential; it’s about a systemic failure of ambition.
The High Cost of Standing Still: Three Pillars of Stagnation
Our national complacency isn’t an abstract concept. It has tangible, painful consequences that are impacting the daily lives of Canadians. Three areas, in particular, highlight the steep price we are paying for our inertia.
1. The Productivity Paradox
Canada is in the midst of a severe productivity crisis. Despite our educated workforce, our output per worker is lagging far behind that of our international peers, most notably the United States. The reasons are multifaceted:
2. The Housing Catastrophe
The housing crisis is perhaps the most visible symptom of our stagnation. It is a policy failure of monumental proportions that is now eroding the social and economic fabric of the country. The root cause is simple: for decades, we have failed to build enough homes for our growing population.
This failure is not just about affordability; it’s a massive drain on national productivity, trapping labour in unproductive regions and saddling young Canadians with crippling debt that stifles innovation and entrepreneurship.
3. The Bureaucratic Maze
Every interaction with a slow-moving government agency, every permit that takes months to process, and every public service that is inefficiently delivered is a tax on our collective potential. Our public sector, in many instances, has become a bastion of the status quo. It is often structured for the convenience of its employees rather than the service of its citizens. This bureaucratic friction doesn’t just cause frustration; it actively discourages the very business formation and investment we so desperately need.
The Path Forward: From Complacency to a Competitive Canada
Recognizing the problem is the first step. The next, and more critical one, is to chart a new course. We must consciously choose to shed our complacency and embrace a culture of ambition, execution, and excellence. This transformation requires decisive action on several fronts.
Embrace a “Yes, If” Mentality
We must systematically dismantle the regulatory and bureaucratic barriers that hold us back. This means shifting from a default position of “No, because” to one of “Yes, if.” We need to streamline approval processes, set clear and ambitious timelines for project reviews, and empower public servants to be problem-solvers, not gatekeepers.
Unleash a Building Boom
Solving the housing crisis is a national economic imperative. All levels of government must align to:
Cultivate a Culture of Excellence and Accountability
We must stop celebrating mediocrity and start demanding excellence in every sphere—from our schools and hospitals to our private corporations. This means:
A Call for a National Ambition
Canada stands at a crossroads. We can continue on our current path of managed decline, where our standard of living slowly erodes and our global influence wanes. Or, we can choose a different future.
The solution lies not in a single policy prescription, but in a fundamental shift in mindset. We must trade our complacency for courage, our risk-aversion for resilience, and our satisfaction with the status quo for a relentless pursuit of progress. We have all the ingredients for success—the resources, the people, and the potential. What we need now is the will to build the dynamic, prosperous, and ambitious Canada we know is possible. The time to start is now.



