Thank you very much, Ms. Dzerowicz. I am glad you are posing this question, because I know that this is an area you have worked on very, very hard, including in the development of the measures in the budget.
We were very clear, in putting together this budget and in presenting it to Canadians, that one thing Canada needs right now is a growth strategy.
I pointed out in my initial remarks that the IMF sees Canada as having the strongest growth in the G7 this year and next year. However, we also need to be candid with each other, as Canadians, that our country, medium and long term, needs to move to a higher gear when it comes to growth, productivity and investment.
Therefore, this budget proposes some key pillars that will help us do that. One is the Canada growth fund that we discussed earlier with Mr. Blaikie. This will crowd in private investment to the green transition. A second one is a new innovation and investment agency to help tackle this very Canadian challenge of translating our high degree of education, of excellent world-leading research, into commercialization and productivity for our businesses.
Then, finally, a really important element is the $3.8 billion that we're investing in our critical minerals strategy, which is more important now than ever with Russia's war in Ukraine. The world needs critical minerals. Canada is an important supplier. This is important in the green transition, and we're investing to really drive that sector.