Thank you very much, Ms. May, for that question. I think we spoke on this issue before, so I think you know that the answer is yes, we should be rethinking all of these things.
The bottom line is that we don't have to produce everything in Canada for ourselves. I think some people may be going a little bit too far on those things, but we could be doing a lot more in this country. We could be upscaling things. Even in the development of our natural resources, it's not just about turning logs into lumber that goes into homes. It's about the technology that goes into harvesting the logs and producing the timber in the first place.
We're so focused on just a narrow niche of what is actually happening in manufacturing and value-added activities. There's a wide range of opportunities out there, and maybe I'll talk about two. I've mentioned a lot of areas of manufacturing strategy in this country, but maybe I'll mention a couple.
First, we need to focus on technology adoption. You mentioned the words “competitiveness” and “productivity”. We are laughably behind most of the rest of the world, and we need to do something about it. If you want to talk about productivity levels, the bottom line is we're so unproductive we can't compete with most of the people we're opening our trade agreements with, and that is a big problem. Our share of globalized trade continues to fall because we're not competitive. It simply costs too much—and we're unproductive—to make things here. We need to fix those types of elements.
Second, we should be targeting areas where we have natural advantages, not trying to create brand new things that don't exist that we have no reason to be involved in. We should be looking at what our resources look like, from human capital right through to our natural resources and how we can harness those better. I'm in southern Ontario right now, in Guelph, in the heartland of the industrial and technology sector of Canada, and those two sectors barely talk to each other, yet manufacturing is going to be driven by technology as we go forward and is largely being driven by it today. There's so much more we can do to drive scale-up and innovation in those sectors.
Maybe I'll stop there, because I know we're running out of time, but it's absolutely true, and I hope the government actually gets around to doing something about it. There have been a lot of conversations and a lot of plans written, but not enough implementation of them a lot of the time.