It would take us a long way there.
It's most important to understand that the world changed about 30 years ago. We liberalized the tangible production economy, and Canada stopped there. We took on neoliberalism all the way. The intangible economy works opposite. It's a very hands-on world with expertise.
We disassembled our economic council in this era, when the rest of the world was doubling down on their equivalent economic councils. We've lost a capacity gap. We didn't have it there.
To be very specific, yes, we need this expertise in the industry, but we need it cutting across all ministries, because every one of these issues touches multiple ministers at the same time.
If you want to make Industry the super ministry on top of all others, that's fine—reorganize government. Or, you may want to make this a core competency that you feed into the cabinet and into the civil service. That's an organizational thing, which I've had considerable engagement in.
I think we just go back and restart a bit what we had before, akin to what I've seen in other nations, which is some deep level of expertise to advise into these kinds of realms. It's been absent. It's so needed.