Certainly. A few of those are in our report, so I'm happy to follow up with that as well.
In my deputation, I did make reference to what is called a “patent box”, which is a way of treating patent taxation in Canada. As you can imagine, it's basically putting a little bit of a fence around an idea—that's what a patent does, in its simplest form—and making sure that people don't steal those ideas and generate them for wealth in different parts of the world. So the use of a patent box—for more notes on that, I can certainly follow up with the committee—would be a great tool.
The government has already taken a few steps. The initiation of the Innovation Asset Collective under ISED has been a great step in the right direction, but we also need to think about making use of and protecting some of the new technologies that have come out of the pandemic. I think the government provincially, federally and municipally—I know those are not all your domains—have put a lot of investment into health technology. How do we make sure that this stays in Canada and services Canadians?
When we look at some of the research and development at NRCan, NRC, IRAP and some of the other investments that are being made through the strategic innovation fund, and we put those investments out into the ecosystem to try to generate business and growth, it's also important to keep tabs on how those ideas are being commercialized to make sure they're benefiting Canada.