Good morning, Madam Chair and committee members. Thank you for the opportunity to appear today.
My name is Daniel Perry. I'm the director of federal affairs at the Council of Canadian Innovators. I’m joined by my colleague, Laurent Carbonneau, our vice-president of policy and advocacy.
The Council of Canadian Innovators is Canada’s 21st-century business council. We represent over 175 Canadian-headquartered, high-growth technology firms operating in a number of sectors, including artificial intelligence, digital infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, defence and other dual-use technologies.
Our members are building businesses right here in Canada, selling into global markets and competing every day for customers, capital and talent. They are exactly the types of firms that Canada needs more of if we're looking to grow our economy and have higher wages and an increased tax base.
Canada is operating in a global environment where policy, industrial strategy and national security are becoming increasingly connected. Leading economies are no longer treating innovation policy as a narrow research file. They're using procurement, capital, trade policy, immigration, standards and national security as tools to shape markets and build domestic capacity. We do not have to look far to see this in action.
As outlined most recently in the U.S. national security strategy, America is treating technological leadership, control over critical technologies, and economic strength as core geopolitical powers. At the same time, the global economy is changing. It is becoming increasingly driven by intangible assets. Think data, intellectual property, algorithms and know-how. This is how it is creating value, and those who are capturing it are leading. These assets make up roughly 92% of the S&P 500, and they are approaching $100 trillion in global value.
Canada needs to respond to this new reality. We have world-class researchers, strong entrepreneurs and companies with global potential. The challenge is that too many of these firms are struggling to scale and grow here in Canada. The barriers are well known: access to customers, access to capital and access to talent. When these barriers are not addressed, Canadian companies are often scaling inside systems defined by others. The result is that intellectual property is leaving Canada. It's the same with our data and decision-making. Long-term economic value has also moved outside the country.
To address this, our pre-budget submission has made four key recommendations.
First, Canada should use public procurement as a strategic economic policy tool. Government is one of the largest buyers in our economy, but we do not use purchasing power effectively to validate Canadian technology, create early customers and help our firms compete globally. Buying Canadian should mean just that. It should mean economically Canadian. Procurement should account for intellectual property, data, domestic economic activity and Canadian control.
Second, Canada should build a sovereign AI and defence industrial base. Compute, cloud, data, software and AI systems are fundamental parts of infrastructure in the modern economy. In defence and other sensitive sectors, Canada cannot afford to be dependent on foreign-controlled systems that it cannot maintain, upgrade or even operate independently.
Third, Canada must strengthen its innovation capital stack. This gap is most acute at the later stage of growth, when Canadian firms are becoming more and more dependent on foreign capital. With foreign capital come the risks of relocation, acquisition and the loss of Canadian IP. Budget 2026 should create and focus government-backed capital on series B and later rounds, and it should introduce a Canadian qualified small business stock-style incentive that will help Canadians stay Canadian as well as raise capital here.
Fourth, Canada should modernize how it is attracting high-potential founders. A more reliable start-up visa that is tied to business performance, job creation and IP retention would help ensure that entrepreneurs have the talent they need in order to build their companies here. We have to be mindful as we move through this, as CUSMA is in the background of this discussion. The upcoming review will help shape rules around data, digital trade, standards and market access. Canada needs to ensure that firms building towards the 21st-century economy are represented in this conversation.
Budget 2026 is an opportunity to move beyond the fragmented measures we have seen to date and to align Canada’s economic, industrial, trade and national security tools around one common objective: helping Canadian firms build, scale and, ultimately, stay here in Canada.
With that, thank you very much. I look forward to your questions.
