The labour shortage is something that we hear about from every single province in the country. It may look different or manifest itself differently in different regions, but it is wholesale pretty much across the board. I think where I'm frustrated is that, like you, I've already acknowledged that we've been talking about this for years.
It's very difficult for industry to read the economic strategy table report, to read the Industry Strategy Council report that came out just before Christmas, and to hear these very enthusiastic cheers for agriculture and food processing and all the potential that it has, and yet when the industry comes forward and says there are some really basic fundamentals they need to get right here, it seems like that all falls on a deaf ear.
Not all the work we do is sexy or is going to include buzzwords. I know that people like to talk about robotics a lot now, but robotics isn't going to address all of industry's production issues, processing capacity issues. Sometimes you just have to roll up your sleeves to deal with the basics and figure out what's going wrong to fix the problem, and I think that's what we have unfortunately failed to do. There is a real, growing frustration on the part of industry.
To the extent that we had problems going into COVID, this sector is going to be incredibly critical for economic recovery. First of all, you need this food supply chain for food sovereignty, but there's also massive potential to leverage what the agri-food sector is doing to actually grow economically, both domestically and also from a trade standpoint. As somebody else pointed out, Canadians will keep eating. If we don't feed them the food we make, someone's going to bring their product in from overseas and people will eat that.