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Declining productivity is the most significant threat to Canada’s standard of living
Over the last decades, productivity in the Canadian economy has failed to grow at the same pace as the United States and other advanced economies.
Productivity growth in Canadian manufacturing averaged 0.88% between 2000 and 2008, well below the 3.3% rate of growth for U.S. manufacturing
As labour costs rose between 2000 and 2007, Canadian business’ per-worker investment in labour-saving machinery and processes was only 52% of the U.S. investment
43% of new jobs come from the fastest growing 5% of all firms
Only 2.66% of Canadian services firms five years or older are able to maintain high-growth. In the U.S. that number is 4.5%. In Israel it's 5.43%
An over-reliance on NAFTA means that Canada has 10 Free Trade Agreements compared to Chile’s 52 thereby limiting potential growth
This will have a negative effect on the Canadian standard of living.
Facilitate business and investor immigration to Canada
Incentivize growth-potential and competitiveness among firms
Expand internal and international trade, and reduce reliance on U.S. trade by removing inter-provincial barriers and signing more free trade agreements