Thank you for that.
I'll send a list to the committee later on, but there are a couple of things.
We've talked about funding. There have been discussions about funding and a new corporation that's being developed. That's great.
In the agri-food research and innovation sector, there are 22 government departments and agencies that deal with funding for research and innovation. That's just in the agri-food sector. There's little to no coordination among all of them. We've asked whether or not the government knows how much money it is spending to support agri-food research and innovation. The answer is that they don't know. They used to know a number of years ago, but they don't know anymore.
The measure of success shouldn't be the number of government funding programs, but rather what the measurable outputs are. One of our recommendations is to undertake a review of Canada's funding program ecosystem and find strong efficiencies, potentially merging some of the programs and bringing them under some coordination.
I'm not saying anything new. Dominic Barton, in his report a number of years ago—which was asked for by the federal government—did say exactly that. There should be better coordination in that sector.
We should also invest in evaluation services. It's not sufficient for a company to say that it received x amount of money from the federal government, created so many jobs and contributed so much to GDP. Let's verify that information to make sure we look at the funding programs in a good way and make sure we are making good decisions.
Those are some of my recommendations. There are a few more, including, if I have one more second, supporting Canadian innovation by standing by Canadian innovation. The agri-food sector is a bit different. It's a bit like pharma. Our products end up in consumers' mouths at one point, directly or indirectly. There's a lot of regulation and a lot of hoops to go through. Once we've gone through all the hoops that are mandated by the government, it is, on occasion, frustrating when the government does not support the science that's been developed on that front.
We have a Canadian chief science adviser. Let's get a better and broader mandate to support the science developed in Canada.
I'll stop there. I see Mr. Chair moving.