Actually, the senior deputy governor touched on this.
I haven't read every page in the budget, but I certainly have looked at it. The way I would put it is that we would largely share the diagnosis of the issues the budget identifies. We've had weak business investment in this country for many years. The impact of tariffs, particularly the impact of the unpredictability of U.S. policy, and the upcoming review CUSMA, those things are all weighing on investment, so investment is even weaker.
This country needs more investment to improve productivity, open new markets and grow our internal market. That involves public investment but also, importantly, catalyzing private investment. We need to do a better job of attracting. We need to keep more of the capital. We need more investment by Canadian businesses in Canada, and we need to do a better job of attracting foreign capital.
I think we see the same diagnostic. There are a number of measures in the budget on the tax side and on the spending side. It's not really up to us to opine on the specific measures in the budget. I will say that fiscal policy can do some important things monetary policy can't do. Fiscal policy can target specific sectors in a way monetary policy can't. We have a number of sectors that have been very hard hit. Fiscal policy can support them directly, and fiscal policy can use the tax system and the spending system to spur investment.
What's going to be important moving forward is the quality of those investments, the quality of that spending and the timely and sound execution. That's not the responsibility of the Bank of Canada, but it is the responsibility of parliamentarians.