Thank you very much, Chair Gould, Vice-Chairs Hallan and Garon, and members of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance. Thank you for the opportunity to present to you today.
I'm here representing the Canadian Shield Institute for Public Policy. We're a new organization devoted to policy ideas that strengthen Canada's economic prosperity and sovereignty. We pay very close attention to what we call “sovereignty beats”. Here's a fun one: Between 2016 and 2024, Canada's budgets used the word “sovereignty” an average of three times per year. Last fall, when Minister of Finance Champagne tabled his budget in the House of Commons, the document mentioned sovereignty 57 times. That's a nineteenfold increase. We're going to have to wait a few months to find out what the number is in 2026, but it's a safe bet that the federal government will still be working to bolster Canada's sovereignty in a very volatile world.
Another thing we think about a lot is what sovereignty actually means. At the Canadian Shield Institute, we argue that governance is the root of sovereignty. We need to have the capability and ability to govern our territory, our economy and our society to be truly sovereign.
By this measure, digital sovereignty must be the most urgent priority for the federal government today, because we don't have it. Too often, we have seen governments respond to digital sovereignty concerns with data residency requirements: If the data centres are on Canadian soil, then that's a job well done.
Unfortunately, it's not so simple. Digital platforms require digital policies and governance institutions that engage with the data, IP, technical standards and platform economics that define the digital realm. Canada right now doesn't govern the activity that happens inside a data centre or in the cloud, so it doesn't matter where the servers are physically located. Canada has spent decades ceding control of our digital infrastructure to foreign private actors. Our daily communications, cloud storage, software systems, productivity tools, AI platforms and public sector technology stacks are overwhelmingly owned and operated by foreign firms. This dependency has direct economic, privacy, national security and democratic consequences. Canada has world-class researchers, strong universities and deep reserves of AI talent, yet the most commercially successful AI systems are owned and scaled elsewhere.
Canada funds research, but the intellectual property ends up owned by foreign firms. Canada generates valuable data, but foreign platforms monetize it. Canada procures technology, but that procurement frequently entrenches foreign hyperscalers rather than builds domestic capacity. In fact, we often count wholly owned foreign subsidiaries as being Canadian firms. This is a profound fiscal and economic strategy failure. Existing and future public expenditures must build Canadian-owned capacity, or we will compound the problem we're seeing today.
In the Canadian Shield Institute's written submission, you'll find detailed policy recommendations for how Canada can better govern the digital economy. Through clear governance, we believe we can capture the value of our own innovations. We also explore these ideas in even more detail through our ongoing policy series, “Foundations of Digital Sovereignty”.
In brief, we recommend that the Government of Canada act on six priorities: establish a whole-of-government digital sovereignty strategy, create a national data trust, modernize federal privacy and data legislation, establish an innovation asset bank, create a strategic sovereign compute entity, and build a strategic standards agenda.
The common denominator among these recommendations is governance. In order to meaningfully engage with the digital economy to drive prosperity and productivity growth, we need to govern how Canadians engage with the digital realm and how the digital realm engages Canadians. This ethos must be suffused in our national institutions, in our trade agreements and in our approach to governance systems like technical standards.
Digital sovereignty cannot be an afterthought. We're long past the point where technology is just one sector of the economy. Tomorrow, from coast to coast to coast, when Canadians get up and go to work, their jobs are going to involve a screen. Whether you're a plumber, a farmer, a banker, a child care worker, a musician or even a member of Parliament, your job today involves using software systems, databases and other digital technology tools.
If Canada is content to let the digital realm be governed by foreign hyperscaler companies or by other governments around the world, we will all be the poorer for it.
We believe Canada is ready to meaningfully assert our sovereignty in the digital realm, and we're really proud to present these policy ideas today on how to move forward in the 2026 federal budget.
I look forward to your questions. Thank you very much.