Three professionally dressed people walk together on a city sidewalk, smiling and talking about employee ownership trusts FAQs. One woman holds a notebook, another gestures while speaking, and the man carries a bag.

Four reasons our economy needs employee ownership now

By Deborah Aarts |  Part of our Special Series: the Ownership Solution | This post first appeared in Smith Business Insight

When you think of employee ownership, what comes to mind?

You might dismiss it as a fringe pursuit. You might think of it as an admirable, if seemingly impractical, approach to doing business. You might see it as a gesture of benevolence—a nice thing to do.

But have you considered employee ownership as an answer to some of society’s stickiest issues?

If you’re unfamiliar with the model, here’s a quick primer: Employee ownership is an umbrella term to describe corporate structures that distribute proprietorship among some or all workers—not just those at the top. In Canada, it tends to take three forms: worker co-operatives (in which all workers share ownership and participate in management), employee share ownership plans (which allow employees to amass ownership stakes as an incentive or as part of their pay), and employee ownership trusts, or EOTs (a new-to-Canada succession structure that allows owners to transfer shares of a corporation to an employee-owned trust in exchange for tax incentives).

For individual businesses, the advantages of employee ownership can be varied and substantial: Employee-owned companies have been found to be more productiveinnovativeresilientprofitable and faster-growing than those with concentrated ownership structures. By now, there is enough data about the brass-tacks benefits to catch the eye of even the most hardened skeptic. (There’s a famous observation among those in the employee ownership space that it’s likely the only economic idea supported by both Ronald Reagan and Bernie Sanders—albeit for very different reasons.)

But the potential advantages go far beyond the scope of individual companies. In fact, experts believe employee ownership can help tackle some of the most pernicious economic problems facing Canada right now.

Three professionally dressed people walk together on a city sidewalk, smiling and talking about employee ownership trusts FAQs. One woman holds a notebook, another gestures while speaking, and the man carries a bag.

Smith Business Insight contributor Deborah Aarts spoke to members of the new Employee Ownership Research Initiative (EORI)—which is housed within Smith’s Centre for Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Social Impact—to understand why employee ownership might be a model for today’s moment.

Problem #1: The “silver tsunami”

Here’s a tough truth about the Canadian economy: It’s built on a bedrock of small- to mid-sized private enterprises, and a lot of their owners are getting out of the game. A 2023 report by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business found that more than three-quarters of Canadian small business owners said they intend to exit before 2033—yet fewer than 10 per cent had a succession plan in place. With some $2 trillion of assets on the line, this so-called “silver tsunami” represents a significant economic problem.

“There’s a generation of retiring business owners with no one to buy their businesses,” explains Melissa Hoover, who is managing director of ownership culture at Apis & Heritage Capital Partners (an investment fund focused on transitioning businesses to employee ownership models), a senior fellow at the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing at Rutgers, and a member of the EORI advisory board. “Many think their only options are to close, to sell to a competitor or to get acquired by private equity—if they are big enough to attract interest. But more and more are starting to recognize employee ownership is an option—and in this moment, a really good one.”

In particular, the Canadian EOT mechanism—which became law in 2024 under the federal Income Tax Act—offers an enticing alternative to selling out or shutting down, by creating a smooth runway for employees to buy out shares and providing fulsome tax incentives to the selling owner(s). “The EOT structure allows exiting owners to maximize the monetization of their life’s work,” explains Elspeth Murray, associate professor and CIBC Fellow in Entrepreneurship at Smith, academic director of the Smith Master of Management Innovation & Entrepreneurship program, and director of both Smith’s Centre for Entrepreneurship, Innovation & Social Impact and the new EORI. “Furthermore, by transitioning ownership to people already working in the organization, it addresses the legacy question: Very few business owners want to just cash out and leave everyone on their team to their own devices.”

Problem #2: Sovereignty threats

As anyone who has recently scrutinized a grocery label knows, economic sovereignty is occupying considerable brain space among Canadians in the current global geopolitical moment. And while employee ownership won’t ameliorate the impact of tariffs or trade wars, experts say it can play an important role in keeping the domestic economy strong and free.

Why? Because the aforementioned silver tsunami is creating what some have described as a “perfect storm” for foreign takeover by private equity firms or multinationals. Employee ownership creates a financially compelling incentive for businesses to stay put. “It’s one way to help keep ownership of businesses within Canada, in Canadian hands,” explains Murray.

There are real economic reasons to encourage this, says Simon Pek, an associate professor at the University of Victoria’s Gustavson School of Business, where he also serves as associate director of the Centre for Regenerative Futures, and an EORI fellow and board member. “Private businesses are often considered anchor institutions in their communities,” he explains. “They create local jobs, support local supply chains and play a material role in keeping communities intact.” Transferring ownership to employees allows those benefits to continue, Pek adds, while increasing the likelihood that the venture will carry on for the long haul: “If a business is going to be sold, it’s far preferable, from a sovereignty perspective, for it to go to people with strong ties to the community than to a foreign company that might not think twice about shutting things down in the future.”

Problem #3: Lagging productivity

Economists, policy-makers and business leaders alike have long bemoaned the persistently lagging productivity of Canada’s economy. Correcting that will require, in the words of McKinsey, “unprecedented pace and bold action” on a number of fronts—and experts believe employee ownership can help.

There’s a growing body of research that demonstrates when companies pair employee equity ownership programs with organizational cultures that encourage participation and agency, productivity improves. “When you align the interest of workers and the interests of employers it creates a powerful incentive for folks to be more productive,” says Pek. “You see workers come forward with more innovative ideas and process improvements because workers clearly stand to benefit.”

Writ large, this contributes to a more productive economy overall, Hoover adds. “Employee ownership proves–in a really practical, meat-and-potatoes way–that not only is a multi-stakeholder economy possible, but that it actually outperforms single-stakeholder capitalist models.”

Problem #4: Wealth inequality

Finally, there’s the matter of wealth inequality. In Canada, the income gap—that is, the difference in the share of disposable income between the wealthiest and poorest households in the country—reached a record high in 2025. “There’s little doubt that there’s a widening gap between the haves and the have nots, and that it’s crushing the middle class,” comments Murray. “I think employee ownership offers an opportunity to help close that gap.”

Hoover considers employee ownership a “market-based strategy for tackling inequality.” She elaborates: “If you want to build wealth in our current economy, you have a few options: owning a house, inheriting money, accumulating stocks and owning a business,” she says. “For a lot of people the latter stands out as the most possible, especially when it’s a shared ownership strategy. It gives people access to a productive asset that keeps generating wealth and building assets.”

This is more appealing to owners than you might expect, Hoover says. They see the same headlines about rising costs and growing debt as everyone else, and most would prefer to be part of the solution than the problem. “If you ask selling owners about their No. 1 concern, it’s usually taking care of the people who work for them,” she says. “Many owners are drawn to the idea of sharing the value that’s created with the people who created it,” especially when there are favourable tax reasons for them to do so.

Furthermore, when workers get ownership (or a path towards it) it sparks all sorts of offshoot economic benefits: They might be able to buy a house, or invest in their communities, or simply maintain stable employment. “It can help address a lot of the issues we all care about,” says Pek.

Pek, Hoover and Murray all acknowledge that employee ownership is not a magic wand. It takes considerable time and effort for owners to implement an ESOP or an EOT, and it can require extensive legal, accounting and operational support to get the details sorted. However, all agree that the work can have a clear—and rewarding—payoff. “When it’s done properly, employee ownership is not as risky as it may seem,” Pek says. “In fact, it can be very valuable—for businesses, yes, but also far beyond that.”


The image shows the tall clock tower and stone facade of the Canadian Parliament building in Ottawa, featuring Gothic Revival architecture against a partly cloudy sky—an inspiring setting for discussing employee ownership trusts FAQs.

Advice to the public service: Five ways to confront monsters and chaos

Events are accelerating quickly in the United States and in our hemisphere. Canadian governments—and the public service—were not designed to confront what we are experiencing. 

We are witnessing a rapid collapse of the rule of law in the United States and a dramatic repudiation by Trump of the world order that the U.S. built and that kept Canadians safe. An authoritarian, imperialist America is quite obviously a threat to Canada. 

Trump and Vance may fail in their attempt at regime consolidation. Their agenda is unpopular and opposition is rising, but they are supported by powerful malignant forces who have control over digital platforms, the information ecosystem and the tools of violence.  

We don’t know what the U.S. will look like in two years. We should not count on free and fair elections this year. But we do know some of the things that 2026 holds for Canada. 

The Trump regime will threaten its former allies and undermine democracies through intimidation. It will deploy maximum pressure against our economy and will continue to extort our people and businesses.  

It will support campaigns of disinformation, targeted in ways to encourage disunity and hate, enabled by American Big Tech.  

The image shows the tall clock tower and stone facade of the Canadian Parliament building in Ottawa, featuring Gothic Revival architecture against a partly cloudy sky—an inspiring setting for discussing employee ownership trusts FAQs.

A transnational network of authoritarian billionaires— with access to huge pools of capital and technology platforms— will accelerate their attempts to undermine successful nation-states like Canada who act as a check on their ambition to replace democratic governments.  

Most Canadians have understood all of this for a while, but the invasion of Venezuela and the threats to Greenland—plus the language used to justify them—make clear what the U.S. has become.    

The Canadian federal government knows all of this. Even if most of our leaders make tactical decisions to bite their tongues, no one doubts any longer what is happening.  

The federal government and the public service were not designed to deal with this kind of threat. Political and bureaucratic leaders are trying to re-wire the system quickly, but systems can’t deliver what they were not designed for. Vertically organized ministries, with highly segregated legal authorities and responsibilities, are not equipped for strategic, coordinated agile decision-making. 

We need rapid changes to confront this national emergency and security threat. Those changes include the instincts, assumptions and habits of public servants and political decision-makers, but also organizational changes—called “machinery of government” issues.  

Ottawa is starting to head in this direction. There is a recognition that processes and systems created in the Before Times are methodical, but are too slow and disjointed to respond in a strategic and integrated way to the current emergency.  For example, the government has taken the necessary steps to create new Crown agencies, like the Major Projects Office and the Defense Investment Agency, to clear administrative hurdles and execute on strategic projects more quickly.  

Let’s start with five “machinery of government” changes that I think are needed to meet today’s threats. I know that some of these are already in the works. 

If Canada had more runway, some of this work could result in the creation of new stand-alone ministries, but that seems unlikely to occur in the next few weeks. But the assignment of full-time Ministers, Deputy Ministers and staff should be possible, even if the ministers don’t have full authority over a statutory department. Soft coordination methods like inter-ministerial results tables or working groups can be useful, but they will not be sufficient in many cases unless they are stewarded very carefully at the most senior levels. Five priorities should be: 

Building democratic resilience 

Our government is not designed to withstand systemic, orchestrated attacks on the institutional foundations of democracy. That should be obvious, as we have watched the global forces of chaos and autocracy undermine the capacity for democratic government in the U.S. The authoritarian playbook is not a mystery and it will be deployed in 2026 within Canada.  

If Americans who are committed to democracy and the rule of law could go back to 2010 or even 2020, they would do many things differently to make the democratic state more resilient to attacks from democracy’s enemies. We need a Minister, properly supported, whose full-time job is to prepare for all the ways that the transnational authoritarian movement will seek to undermine the Canadian democratic state, and to take action to make the authoritarian project less likely to succeed. Reinforcing the independence and transparency of elections so that the public would quickly dismiss false claims of election fraud and improving support for civic, local and independent journalism are two of many steps that should be undertaken. 

Governing Big Tech platforms 

In 2018, I began work within the federal government to develop governance to more strategically confront thethreat that digital platforms represented to our economy, national security, democracy and children, and to build capacity within the federal public service to treat them as geopolitical actors. This entailed assembling expertise from across multiple departments, all of whom were engaged with Big Tech with different objectives and on different issues, but were overmatched by the capacity of the world’s largest companies.  

Although the government chose to defer decisions at that time, the case for action has only gotten stronger. Our options today are more constrained than they were a decade ago, but we need to mobilize across the system to ensure our digital sovereignty and have at least some democratic control over Big Tech. 

Coordinating national security 

Those charged with protecting Canadian national security and sovereignty are scattered across multiple agencies and ministries. The Canadian Armed Forces, the RCMP, Global Affairs, Public Safety, Industry, Fisheries, Justice and multiple security and intelligence agencies across multiple ministries have never been properly coordinated. That is endemic and, until this year, did not represent an existential threat.  

I know work is underway to apply a more integrated lens and decision-making process to a variety of issues including foreign investment review, defense procurement, monitoring hate and the work of the Coast Guard. But organizational cultures, legal responsibilities and program authorities do not align easily or change quickly. Re-working this governance, in real time, is an urgent national priority. 

Supporting the community and charitable sector 

The not-for-profit sector, broadly defined, has no home in government. Private-sector industriesfrom agriculture to fisheries to natural resources to manufacturing and autoknow where to go in government when they need support meeting a vital need. Charities, foundations, community organizations, co-ops and not-for-profits have no Minister thinking of them first and how they can be supportedand how they can help meet urgent national priorities that play out in community.  

While there are scattered offices in ESDC, Industry and the CRA, these are not designed to meet the needs of civil society organizations. These organizations, working in community, are going to be vital to Canada’s resilience. If Canada is to thrive in the coming decade, we will need to mobilize all sectors and the government needs to engage with them as strategic partners. 

Preserving national unity 

The federal government should build secretariats within the Privy Council Office to prepare for the inevitable onslaught of disinformation and illegal foreign intervention in Canadian issues. These campaigns will be designed to exacerbate and invent regional grievances and animosities in the context of discussions about Alberta and Quebec secession.  

There will be many American agents of chaos looking to disrupt Canadian democratic processes and our sovereignty this year. A peaceful, democratic Canada that respects human rights and the rule of law is an important counterpoint to the world’s most dangerous authoritarian regimes and the dissolution of Canada would be a huge victory for the forces of global authoritarianism.  

But machinery changes alone will not be enough. We need to rewire our brains, not just our organizations.  

There are many ideas and habits deeply embedded in the federal government that are not right for this moment. Bringing new people and perspectives into the government—including private-sector, not-for-profit, community, faith and labour leaders—can help. Some of the changes in our mental maps are already underway, but will need to be intensified. To succeed, we will need: 

Transparency and engagement. While it will be necessary to keep many plans secret, the federal government and public service need to be more transparent and engage more directly with leaders and communities across the country who can help them co-create and co-deliver solutions. 

Innovative state capacity. We need to discard the deeply embedded neoliberal assumptions that have governed policymaking for over three decades and learn how to deploy the state in a strategic ways, using all the tools of industrial strategy to deliver positive economic outcomes. 

More talk of shared citizenship and sacrifice. Governments need to talk more about our responsibilities as citizens. Our governments will have to ask more of us – and ask those of us with privilege and economic security to make sacrifices. That includes being very frank about the threats we face and how a peaceful, law-abiding democratic Canada—despite all its flaw—is the best hope for ordinary Canadians to have a meaningful, secure, prosperous life. Fascist countries with secret police who shoot down their citizens in the street are not great places for ordinary working people to live and thrive. 

These are some early thoughts on evolving federal governance and I welcome others. I know people within the federal government are contemplating how to organize themselves to confront this national emergency and a belligerent United States. This is a time like no other in our history, and those making decisions have not been trained for this unprecedented threat—because we haven’t experienced anything like this before.  

If those entrusted with the enormous responsibility to navigate Canada through this crisis approach the moment with humility, a willingness to discard some of the things they thought they knew and recognize that they will need help from across Canadian society, we can get through this. There are signs that this is happening, and I’m cautiously optimistic that our governments can organize themselves in new ways to meet this moment of peril. 


A leafless tree with twisting branches stands before two old, two-story houses under a clear blue sky, their porches and pale exteriors subtly hinting at the history of civic responsibilities in the neighborhood.

How to get single family homes out of the hands of investors | Toronto Star

By Matthew Mendelsohn , Mike Moffat and Jon Shell | This post was published in the Toronto Star

Canada needs more rental housing. But it also needs to get existing homes out of the hands of investors and back into the hands of families. The federal government can achieve both simultaneously by fulfilling one of its key campaign promises — with a twist.

Many Canadians are angry about the state of Canada’s housing market, with a recent Abacus poll finding that 56 per cent of Canadians say housing should be a top-3 priority for the federal government. Yet only 28 per cent believe the federal government is on track to meet their housing goals. Many potential homebuyers feel they cannot compete with investors, who have been increasing their share of the resale market.

The federal government is taking some steps to address Canada’s housing crisis. There are programs designed to build new supply, preserve existing affordable supply and reduce demand. But one potentially powerful approach is missing from this suite of programs: incentivizing investors to move their capital to more productive uses…

Read the full article (Paywall)

overhead shot of burnaby BC refinery

Budget was missing a Canadian ownership strategy

By Jon Shell |  Part of our Special Series: the Ownership Solution | This post first appeared in The Hill Times

The day before the Canadian federal budget was introduced, a Canadian gold mining company called New Gold announced that it would be acquired by American-owned Coeur Mining. This comes only a couple months after the proposed acquisition of one of Canada’s largest miners, Teck Resources, by British-owned Anglo American.

While government approval is still required for these deals to proceed, Ottawa recently signed off on Sunoco’s acquisition of Parkland Corporation, owner of over of 15% of Canada’s gas stations and an important refinery in B.C. That deal provides little or no benefit to the Canadian economy, has already resulted in job losses and turns critical infrastructure over to an American company.

This was the first real test of the newly beefed-up Investment Canada Act, which allows the government to reject acquisitions of companies like Parkland on economic security grounds. The test did not go well.

There was a time when deals like this could be dismissed as just the cut and thrust of global finance in an ever more connected world.

overhead shot of burnaby BC refinery

But the federal budget goes to great pains to explain that that those days are over and calls, many times, for “generational investments.”

You know what’s easier than making a generational investment? Not selling the things you already have.

As governments turn protectionist around the world, if Canada stays “open for business,” there’s a significant risk of a repeat of 2006-2007, when foreign investors scooped up major Canadian companies like Inco, Falconbridge, Noranda, Stelco and ATI.

The impact of the loss of head offices, research jobs and control over Canadian resources is still being felt today.

Recently, the current American owner of Stelco, one of Hamilton, Ontario’s major employers, came out in favour of the American tariffs on steel that are harming his own Canadian employees, raising the ire of Ontario Premier Doug Ford.

While the recent budget used the word “sovereign” 81 times, it did not define a clear strategy to build and maintain Canadian ownership of our assets.

When combined with its focus on attracting private capital, there’s a real danger that the federal government will enable a sell-off of Canadian companies to foreign investors. It’s even possible that this sell-off would be considered a “win” for the strategy, as it could be characterized as an investment in Canada.

This would be a mistake.

There is a significant difference between investing in building and investing in buying.

Building leads to new assets, like the Kitimat LNG terminal in B.C., funded in large part by foreign capital. Buying often leads to a loss of head office jobs, innovation capacity and sovereignty.

With the government signaling a willingness to sell Canada’s airports and ports in this budget, bringing back memories of Ontario’s disastrous sale of Highway 407 to a Spanish company, it’s dangerous to proceed without clearly defining what kind of foreign investment we’d accept.

The mistake could easily be corrected with four concrete steps:

First, the budget sets out to “build, protect and empower Canada.” A Canadian ownership strategy fits cleanly in the “protect” column. It could define Canadian ownership more narrowly and ensure that programs like the Scientific Research and Experimental Development tax incentive do not benefit foreign-owned companies.

Secondly, it could reject the proposed acquisitions of Canadian mining companies, making it clear Canadian ownership is a priority.

Thirdly, it could prioritize ownership structures that enhance sovereignty, like employee and community ownership.

Finally, it could tie all these together with other pro-Canadian measures in the budget, like the Critical Minerals Sovereign Fund into a strong and important narrative that Canadians would support.

When a Canadian company is sold, it can be decades before the impact is fully understood.

At the time of its sale to AMD in 2006, ATI, based in Mississauga, shared the global market for graphics chips equally with U.S.-based Nvidia. Today, Nvidia is the leading global supplier of chips that power AI, employes 36,000 people and is worth $5 trillion USD.

AMD bought ATI for $5.4 billion USD and employs fewer Canadians today than in 2006, despite promising to keep a major research centre in Canada.

The U.S. is leveraging Nvidia’s success in their trade war with China. Imagine if that power resided in Canada instead?

If we really want to build a Canada that is “confident, secure and resilient,” we can’t afford to repeat the mistakes of the past.

Sovereignty requires ownership. It’s clear that China and Trump’s America understand that. It’s time for the Canadian government to prove that Canada understands it too.


A man sits at a desk speaking, with the subtitle Inequalities persist at a very extreme level. Above him is an illustrated cover of the World Inequality Report 2026. Employee ownership trusts FAQs are highlighted in a modern, bright office setting.

What the new World Inequality Report tells us, and why it matters for Canada

Economic growth is often treated as a shorthand for progress. As the old story goes, if our Gross Domestic Product (GDP) goes up, then we’re all better off.

But the latest World Inequality Report offers another sobering reminder that who benefits from economic growth matters just as much as how much the economy has grown. And the economic order keeps tilting further and further towards serving a tiny, ultra-wealthy minority.

This is why the World Inequality Database (WID) and this flagship 2026 report matter so much. Launched in 2018, the global effort brings together more than 200 researchers to track income and wealth inequality over time, building a shared global infrastructure to understand—and sometimes even expose—trends that were previously hidden or fragmented.

Canada is a part of this global network of experts, which is vital—because, as we have said in our own 2024 Billionaire Blindspot report, you can’t fix what you can’t see.

The most important new finding is that today’s inequality story is not primarily about the richest 10%, or even the richest 1%. It’s about what’s happening at the very top of the wealth distribution.

Globally, the richest 0.001%—think of them as roughly 60,000 people, or the world’s billionaires, or how many people can fit in a football stadium—have dramatically increased their share of total wealth.

Cover of the World Inequality Report 2026 by the World Inequality Lab, featuring green wave graphics, coordinator names, foreword authors, and the lab’s logo in the bottom right corner—plus a section on employee ownership trusts FAQs.

In 1995, this group held about 3.8% of global wealth, but by 2025, that share had climbed to 6.1%. Over the same period, their personal wealth also grew at annual rates between 2% and 8.5%, far outpacing the bottom half of the population, whose wealth grew at just 2% to 4% per year.

When policy debates focus on “the rich” as a broad category, they miss the fact that most of the action is concentrated among a very small number of families (and tech bros) at the extreme top. Looking only at the top 10% or top 1% risks obscuring the true scale—and drivers—of wealth concentration.

Why does this matter? The evidence is overwhelming that growth that produces extreme inequality leads to less resilient, less healthy and less prosperous societies. And economic inequality drives prices and asset values out of reach, depriving ordinary working people from access to goods and services.

It also entrenches power.

“The result is a world in which a tiny minority commands unprecedented financial power, while billions remain excluded from even basic economic stability,” the authors, led by Ricardo Gómez-Carrera of the Paris School of Economics, write.

In Canada, too, although Canada’s GDP keeps going up, wealth gains have been concentrated at the very top. Many Canadian households are struggling to afford food and housing.

As our colleagues at the Canadian Tax Observatory have also pointed out, one key factor is taxation—or more precisely, who governments are willing or able to tax. International data in the report show a striking pattern: at the very highest income levels, effective tax rates actually decline (see Figure 12 from the report, below). In other words, the ultra-rich often pay lower effective tax rates than those who are merely “rich,” and in some cases, even lower than middle-income earners.

Canada-specific data at this level are notoriously hard to come by, but SCP’s own research suggests a similar dynamic. The wealthiest Canadians increasingly derive their income from capital gains, rather than wages, which are taxed at a lower rate. Our tax system, while containing many progressive elements, actually exacerbates the problem of growing wealth inequality. Because of tax breaks for capital gains and dividends, tax rates on income derived from wealth are lower than those on income derived from working. And that’s before even considering the kinds of sophisticated tax-planning and wealth sheltering strategies that only the wealthy tend to have access to.

The report ranks countries based on the number of data sources they use to measure wealth inequality and Canada sits in the middle of the pack—behind the U.S. and much of Western Europe in terms of transparency and data coverage.

Without high-quality data, policymakers are left debating inequality in the dark. The one-page country profiles in the World Inequality Report are short, but the Canadian profile is revealing. The report’s estimates show greater wealth concentration than the most recent Canadian Parliamentary Budget Officer (PBO) figures based on “rich lists.” For example, the report estimates that the top 1% in Canada hold about 29.3% of total wealth, compared to 23.8% in the PBO’s analysis.

Momentum is building in Canada for better wealth data. Statistics Canada recently released its first serious attempt at improving measurement of wealth at the top—something SCP has long called for. It’s a promising step toward shedding light on Canada’s billionaire blindspot.

The deeper challenge is policy. As Canada faces an unprecedented economic assault from the south, there is a risk that the policy instruments we deploy to encourage growth will exacerbate inequality. We do not want to encourage growth that sees all the returns go to those who already have extreme wealth. We need to tackle the structural dysfunction within the economy today that sees gains and redistribution flow almost entirely upward.

That means better ways for families and communities to build assets—like affordable housing, business ownership, retirement security and emergency savings—alongside tax and regulatory reforms that ensure fair taxation of the ultra-wealthy.

The World Inequality Report is clear: wealth inequality is not inevitable. It is the result of choices.

And when the richest 10% of the world’s population owns 75% of wealth and the bottom half just 2%, it’s time we choose something different.


A yellow building with colorful polka dots houses Crystal Coin Laundry. A blue sign is prominent, and an OPEN sign marks the door. Leafless trees and power lines are seen in the background, giving a bright setting perfect for reading up on employee ownership trusts FAQs.

Ontario wakes up to the succession tsunami

By Dan Skilleter | Part of our Special Series: the Ownership Solution

While it never cracks their Top-10 lists of policy asks, small-business groups and local chambers of commerce have for years been beating the drum of concern over the impending retirement of a massive cohort of baby-boomer business owners. The CFIB’s seminal 2023 report, Succession Tsunami, looms large in the discourse, with its eye-popping statistics of 76% of owners planning to exit over the next decade, with only 10% having a succession plan.

However (with the notable exception of Quebec), it’s a topic that governments across Canada have barely lifted a finger on. Which makes Ontario’s recent public foray into this policy space worth paying attention to.

Last week, Ontario unveiled their plan to implement Budget 2024’s commitment to invest $1.9 million over three years to establish a business succession planning hub. Its newly launched website, SuccessionOntario.ca, helps owners understand their options and funnels them towards a local Small Business Enterprise Centre (SBEC) for tailored advice and services.

They’ve decided to target so-called “micro businesses” and, from what I understand, a lot of the money is going into training and resources for SBEC staff across the province. The average business owner they’re targeting is of a generation that prefers in-person meetings to internet modules—so this approach makes sense.

A yellow building with colorful polka dots houses Crystal Coin Laundry. A blue sign is prominent, and an OPEN sign marks the door. Leafless trees and power lines are seen in the background, giving a bright setting perfect for reading up on employee ownership trusts FAQs.

A couple of interesting things.

First, it was a welcome surprise to see the succession hub’s focus on employee ownership. Featured prominently as the second ‘exit option’ for owners, it’s a strong sign that Canada’s relatively new Employee Ownership Trust (EOT) is breaking through. The EOT is a policy near and dear to my heart, and one I’ve been helping to support the policy design and advocacy of for years. Seeing Ontario recommend it to owners casually alongside options like intergenerational transfer is a sign that it’s becoming mainstream. [1]

Second, the government has adopted an all-too-familiar approach to its problem definition. They view the succession issue as too many business owners without the time, information or know-how to begin their exit planning before it’s too late. Success looks like owners engaging in succession planning early and finding a buyer willing to pay market rate. Any buyer will do.

While important, their framing is single-mindedly focused on the retiring business owner. It overlooks the outcomes for everyone else after the dust has settled. There’s a wide array of buyers out there, each with different implications for the future of the company, its workers and the local community where the company’s located. A foreign private equity firm is a very different new owner than a young entrepreneur, or the employees of the company itself.

The government’s policy lens should be expanded and include a broader commitment to the ongoing resilience, growth and sovereignty of the economy—its slogan is Protect Ontario, after all.

The amount of money Ontario has put into this so far is miniscule, but I take it as a positive signal that succession has finally reached the coveted podium of ‘policy file’ within the bureaucracy.

In 2026, expect Social Capital Partners to spend a lot more of its time working with governments like Ontario on building out the research and ideas to ensure Canada has the right sort of policy infrastructure to withstand the oncoming tsunami.

[1] For those of you who aren’t familiar, the EOT is new federal policy that is tailor-made to help business owners to sell their companies to their employees. For an overview, this is a good start.


map showing on open laptop computer with hands typing

Mapping the economic centre-left

There’s an experience I have on a more regular basis than I’d like to admit. Maybe you’ve had it, too.

I’ll read a few economic blogs or listen to podcasts discussing a major trend or issue with the economy, and I’ll be nodding along in agreement with several of them, only to be hit by the realization afterwards that they were espousing some pretty different centre-left (maybe even contradictory) premises.

This has especially been the case in the American blogosphere, which is large and well-funded enough to have seen a pretty wide array of voices and ideological camps emerge within the centre-left tent. So big, in fact, that there’s a sub-genre of inter-blog conflict dedicated to people named Matt. (1)

One piece will insist that the real problem with the economy is financialization, another will argue that what really matters is building more. A third might claim the real issue is that the state no longer has the capacity to do big things. Then someone else will say that the market rules themselves are rigged, so none of the rest matters until we fix that.

They all make compelling cases, at least in part.

Over the years, I’ve found it useful to categorize these different centre-left ideological camps in my head.

map showing on open laptop computer with hands typing

They’re not mutually exclusive, and most people probably identify with a few at once. But each has its own story about what’s wrong with the economy and how they’d prioritize dealing with it.

Here’s how I’ve come to think about them:

1. Anti-Extraction
The economy rewards financial engineering and short-term profit over productive investment. Corporate incentives push firms to strip assets, buy back stock and chase quarterly returns rather than build.

2. Pre-Distribution
The “rules of the game” are tilted. Labour laws, competition policy and procurement all favour capital and incumbents. The problem isn’t just inequality; it’s that markets are designed to produce it.

3. Market Socialism
Some goods and services (think healthcare, housing, energy or even grocery) just don’t work well when run for profit. Private ownership in these sectors tends toward fragility and exploitation.

4. Anti-Monopoly
Big firms have grown too dominant, smothering competition and innovation. Whether it’s tech, grocery or telecom, concentrated market power harms consumers and suppliers alike.

5. Community / Localism
Wealth and ownership have become too detached from place. External investors extract profits from communities, leaving them hollowed out.

6. Mission-Oriented
Markets are good at incremental innovation, but bad at solving big public challenges. The state needs to set national missions (decarbonization, housing, biotech) and mobilize private effort around them.

7. Abundance
Our biggest problem isn’t greed or inequality, it’s scarcity—especially of housing, infrastructure and clean energy. We’ve made it too hard to build, thanks to endless permitting and restrictive zoning.

8. Redistribution First
Inequality is baked into capitalism. No matter how we tweak the rules, markets will generate unequal outcomes. That’s fine, but we need strong taxes and transfers to rebalance things after the fact.

The Camps

Camp

Core Problem with Economy

Default Policy Instinct

Who’s the bad guy?

Key Detractors on Left

Anti-Extraction Corporate incentives and capital markets reward short-term extraction of value (financialization, asset-stripping) rather than long-term investment and value creation. Reform corporate governance, finance and incentive structures to reward productive, sustainable business models. Financial engineers — Wall Street, Bay Street, private equity, hedge funds, shareholder activists — who extract short-term profits rather than build productive enterprises. They gut firms, communities and long-term prosperity to feed financial returns. Abundance advocates who see this as slowing necessary build-out; some mission-oriented strategists.
Pre-Distribution The “rules of the game” in markets are tilted toward capital over labour, incumbents over new entrants and concentrated wealth. Rewrite market rules to give workers and smaller players more power and share of returns (labour law, competition, procurement, ownership diversification, social wages, universal childcare and transit). Rigged market rules that privilege employers and capital over workers and communities. The villains are less individuals than the system—weak labour laws, tilted corporate governance, procurement rules that reward low-road business models. Abundance advocates wary of heavy market rules (‘everything bagel’ liberalism) which can stifle building.
Market Socialism In certain essential sectors, private ownership inherently produces affordability and resilience failures—even with strong regulation. Sovereign wealth fund, public banks, Crown corporations. Private profiteers in essential goods/services (for-profit LTC chains, telecom monopolies). Things too essential to be left to profit-seeking should be in public/communal hands, but rent-seekers keep them privatized. Mission-oriented who want private sector partnerships; pre-distribution/anti-monopoly/anti-extraction who would say that a better way to solve problems is to heavily regulate and change the rules.
Anti-Monopoly Excessive market concentration lets dominant firms exploit consumers, workers and suppliers while stifling innovation. Break up dominant firms, block anti-competitive mergers and regulate powerful players to restore competition. Dominant corporations and monopolists (Big Tech, Big Grocery, Big Banks) who squash competition, exploit consumers and bully workers. Concentrated private power is incompatible with democracy and free markets. Redistributionists who say it’s too slow/indirect; some mission-oriented actors who worry about hindering scale and creating national champions for a strategic purpose.
Community/Local Wealth and ownership are too concentrated in extractive firms and external investors, leaving communities dependent, disempowered and vulnerable. Local economies often “leak” value rather than building lasting prosperity for residents. Redesign economic institutions so that ownership, control and investment are rooted in communities. The goal is to “lock in” wealth locally and ensure it circulates broadly. Extractive corporations, absentee landlords, private equity firms and external investors who strip value from communities and displace local economic control. Some redistribution-first advocates who argue that CWB is too slow and incremental compared to direct taxation/transfer. Certain post-growth advocates may see local economic development as still reproducing growth logics. Some abundance/mission-oriented thinkers may see CWB as parochial or insufficiently focused on national-scale innovation and scaling.
Mission-Oriented Markets alone underinvest in solving big societal challenges and fail to align innovation with public needs. Use active state leadership—investment, procurement, R&D, conditionalities—to mobilize private sector toward national missions. Short-sighted markets and timid governments that fail to rise to big challenges (climate, health, innovation). Incumbents defend the status quo and the real villain is a lack of ambition and direction. Anti-monopolists who fear entrenching “national champions.” Redistribution-first proponents who think this approach doesn’t solve the fundamental economic problems.
Abundance Chronic undersupply and bottlenecks in key goods/services drive up costs and limit opportunity. Remove barriers to production and speed up approvals/builds to rapidly scale supply in housing, energy, infrastructure, etc. Bottleneck creators—NIMBYs, slow regulators, legacy incumbents—who block supply and keep things scarce (housing, energy, infrastructure). Red tape, restrictive zoning and entrenched veto players drive up costs for everyone. Redistributionists who see it as neglecting equity; anti-extractionists who fear quality/sustainability trade-offs.
Redistribution First Markets naturally generate large inequalities in income and wealth; these imbalances undermine fairness, opportunity and social cohesion. Use the tax-and-transfer system to redistribute income/wealth and fund universal public services after the fact. The super-rich who hoard wealth and dodge taxes. They’re not playing fair, they can easily afford to pay more and they corrupt democracy by resisting progressive taxation. Anti-monopolists, abundance advocates who see this as ignoring supply constraints. Pre-distribution/anti-extraction/anti-monopolists who disagree on tackling problems upstream instead of downstream re: theory of change.

When the people and organizations I respect in Canada or the U.S. disagree on how to best respond to the policy issue du jour, it’s usually because they’re prioritizing what the root economic problem is differently. Sometimes the diagnoses overlap, sometimes they clash. But each perspective offers a distinct set of tools.

And while clashes between these camps are usually entirely avoidable (preferably so), I find them fascinating when they happen: Abundance advocates finding anti-monopoly reformers to be too focused on process, not outcomes. Redistributionists thinking abundance advocates underestimate power and inequality. Mission-oriented advocates worrying that localists are too small-ball. And so on.

These frictions are what make this ecosystem intellectually rich. But in practice, progress often comes from borrowing across camps, creating coalitions and finding the best lens for the problem at hand.

I’ve shared this breakdown with a few wonk friends who found it interesting, so thought it would be worth publishing more broadly.

(1) Yglesias, Stoller, and Bruenig


Two women, one older and one younger, sit close together on a couch, smiling as they look at a book or magazine in their laps—perhaps exploring employee ownership trusts FAQs in the softly lit room by the window.

How intergenerational inequality threatens trust in democracy | Policy Options

By Jean-François Daoust, Liam O'Toole and Jacob Robbins-Kanter | This post originally appeared in Policy Options

The well-documented cost-of-living crisis plaguing young Canadians has triggered deep anxiety about their future – whether they can build stable careers, afford homes or one day raise families.

This is not only an economic problem. It’s a political one. As intergenerational inequality persists and deepens, Canada risks experiencing an even sharper decline in trust in its democratic institutions than what already exists.

To combat this, our political leaders must be willing to make difficult tradeoffs that rebalance priorities toward the young. That means rethinking tax incentives, addressing budget deficits that will fall on future generations and ensuring public spending supports those still trying to build their lives, not just those comfortably established – the group that is the focus of most politicians today.

An older woman and a younger woman sit together on a couch, smiling and looking at a book or photo album, sharing a warm moment while discussing employee ownership trusts FAQs.

The young face widespread problems

Home ownership, which has been a cornerstone of middle-class security for decades, is now one of the clearest markers of generational division. For most young Canadians, even saving for a down payment has become very challenging.

As existing homeowners’ properties have ballooned in value at the same time, the housing market has become a mechanism of (unequal) wealth transfer from the young to the old – reinforced by governments that are reluctant to confront politically powerful older homeowners.

The broader economic picture for younger Canadians also offers little hope. Wages have stagnated while costs have soared. Young Canadians are more educated than any previous generation, yet many work at precarious jobs with low pay, unstable hours and few benefits. Student debt and unaffordable child care make it harder to build savings or start families. Indeed, many people are reluctant to have the number of children they would like.

Previous beliefs that education and effort can lead to upward mobility no longer ring true. Instead, young Canadians face economic realities that demand more but give back less.

Politicians listen to older voters, not the young

This economic frustration runs hand-in-hand with political alienation. Older Canadians vote in greater percentages, contribute more to political campaigns and therefore wield disproportionate influence. Politicians cater to their interests and make sure to focus on the issues most important to older citizens.

Younger voters, facing economic instability and disillusionment, are increasingly disengaged from the political process, which only perpetuates their exclusion. This negative feedback loop erodes faith in democracy itself because young Canadians increasingly view politics as unresponsive to their needs.

The effects of this generational divide are already visible in Canada’s political landscape. Young Canadians vote at significantly lower rates than their older counterparts. In the 2021 federal election, only about 46 per cent of eligible voters aged 18 to 24 cast a ballot, compared with nearly 75 per cent of those 65 and older.

Surveys also show that younger Canadians express less confidence in elected officials, political parties and government institutions than any other age group. Many believe that no party truly represents their interests and that the political system is stacked in favour of homeowners and retirees.

It’s time to act

For younger generations, other forms of civic engagement, such as volunteering or signing petitions, may soon see further declines, according to a 2022 federal government report. This erosion of political participation is not apathy born of ignorance, but frustration born of exclusion. It’s a warning sign that Canada’s democracy is losing the trust of its future citizens.

Meanwhile, Canada faces a demographic reckoning. As Baby Boomers retire, health care and pension costs will balloon, to be financed by a smaller, economically strained population.

Younger Canadians, already struggling with stagnant incomes and rising costs, are delaying or forgoing having children altogether. This creates a vicious cycle: fewer workers to support an aging population and an ever-heavier fiscal burden. If left unaddressed, this imbalance threatens not just economic sustainability but trust in Canada’s political institutions.

If these trends persist, resentment among younger generations will likely deepen. Some will turn to political apathy. Others may seek more radical movements or figures that promise to upend a system they see as rigged against them. Once trust in the political system is lost, rebuilding it will be far more difficult than preventing its collapse.

To understand the extent of these challenges, we first need better data that illustrate younger generations’ political preferences and interests. These views should then be more effectively communicated to those in positions of political power – ideally resulting in improved representation. Some activists, notably the think tank Generation Squeeze, are already carrying out this work.

Canada needs a generational reset – one that puts fairness at the centre of political life. Building affordable housing and supporting young families are essential first steps.

The longer Canada ignores generational inequality, the greater the risk of political fragmentation and social anger. A healthy democracy depends on engaged citizens and political trust across generations. Today, this is running dangerously low among our younger people.


Illustration with a man helping a woman climb onto a platform, next to the text Employee Ownership Research Initiative and Centre for Entrepreneurship, Innovation & Social Impact, highlighting Rate Drop Rebate in London Ontario.

Smith School of Business launches new Employee Ownership Research Initiative

November 25, 2025, Kingston (ON) – With three in four Canadian owners set to exit their business within the next decade, Smith School of Business has launched a new research initiative focused on deepening Canada’s knowledge and understanding of a powerful succession model that can enhance outcomes for owners, employees and communities: Employee ownership.

Housed in Smith’s Centre for Entrepreneurship Innovation & Social Impact (CEISI), the Employee Ownership Research Initiative (EORI) aims to shape a ‘Made in Canada’ approach to employee ownership by creating a multi-disciplinary network of academics, researchers, practitioners and businesses. Together, they will fill the gap in relevant data, expertise and business-oriented resources and solutions to support employee ownership activities in the country.

“Amid today’s geopolitical climate and concerns around economic sovereignty, employee ownership can play a crucial role in helping keep Canadian businesses locally owned and creating prosperity for more people,” says CEISI Director Elspeth Murray. “As we experience the so-called ‘Silver Tsunami’, transferring majority ownership to employees, including Canada’s new Employee Ownership Trust model, is a hot topic under consideration, but the process and options are not well understood, especially in a Canadian context.”

That’s about to change thanks to funding support from Jon Shell, a grad of Queen’s University, Chair of Social Capital Partners and board member at Employee Ownership Canada. A prominent advocate for employee ownership in Canada, he has committed $250,000 to assist EORI in conducting research into the impact of broad-based, majority employee-owned Canadian enterprises and government policies to support employee ownership in Canada.

“Employee ownership offers a powerful opportunity to broaden prosperity and strengthen communities,” says Shell. “By grounding the conversation in rigorous research, this initiative will help Canada build an evidence base for a more inclusive and sustainable economy.”

While employee ownership is well studied in the United States and the UK, EORI represents the first comprehensive research initiative of its kind in Canada dedicated to understanding the impact of employee ownership activities and the factors that drive the success of companies owned indirectly through a trust or through the purchase of shares over time.

The multi-year project will establish a national database of majority employee-owned businesses, conduct research and case studies, and share findings through open-access reports, workshops and public events. This work will contribute to a growing movement of companies, scholars, associations and advisors in the employee ownership space, and help shape employee ownership policies and best practices in Canada.

The EORI’s work will be guided by leading academics and industry experts in the field. PhD candidate Lorin Busaan and Associate Professor Simon Pek, both from the Peter B. Gustavson School of Business at the University of Victoria, are joining EORI as research fellows. Pek will also serve on the advisory board alongside Shell and Joseph Blasi, J. Robert Beyster Distinguished Professor and Director Emeritus of the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing at the School of Management and Labor Relations at Rutgers University; Mike Fotheringham, CEO of Taproot Community Support Services; John Hoffmire, Founder of the Center on Business and Poverty, and Research Associate at the Centre for Mutual and Co-owned Business at the University of Oxford’s Kellogg College; and Melissa Hoover, Senior Fellow and Senior Director of the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing at the School of Management and Labor Relations at Rutgers University, and Managing Director of Ownership Culture at Apis & Heritage Capital Partners.

“The research initiative is a big part of creating greater awareness and also the knowledge and know-how for Canadian owners, workers and communities to reap the benefits of employee ownership,” says Murray.

For more information, please visit Employee Ownership Research Initiative.

For media enquiries, please contact:

Smith School of Business

Send media relations a message
Voice: 613.533.2269


A baseball player in a white uniform and blue cap dives horizontally, stretching out his gloved hand to catch a ball—much like seeking answers in employee ownership trusts FAQs—just above the ground on a baseball field.

Elbows up: Keeping Canadian companies in Canadian hands | Policy Options

By Danny Parys | Part of our Special Series: the Ownership Solution | This post originally appeared in Policy Options

During the Blue Jays’ historic and, subsequently, gut-wrenching run, apparel sales for the team soared across Canada as fans flocked to shell out cash to show their support. Maybe you were one of them.

Maybe you went one step further. Maybe the sole Canadian team’s domination of America’s pastime made you feel a little national pride and, before you headed out to get that new jersey, you pulled on your Roots sweatpants and stopped at Tim Hortons for a double-double on your way to the store.

Then, beside the Jays’ jersey (in this thought experiment there is still a No. 27 Guerrero Jr. in stock in your size) you saw that the CCM hockey stick you really wanted was on sale. Winter is coming, you thought to yourself, so you bought that too.

On your way home, you picked up a case of Labatt Blue, a bag of Miss Vickie’s jalapeno chips (objectively the best flavour) and kicked back to enjoy the game, feeling extra patriotic with all your favourite iconic Canadian brands. Elbows up, eh?

Though if you had done that, the only Canadian brand you would have been supporting in your perfect Canadian day would have been the Blue Jays, a franchise of U.S.-headquartered Major League Baseball.

A baseball player in a white Toronto Blue Jays uniform dives forward, reaching out with his gloved hand to catch a baseball just above the grass—much like tackling employee ownership trusts FAQs with precision and focus.

Indeed, in recent years, many of Canada’s most famous companies and most iconic brands have quietly, but steadily, been purchased by foreign entities. Beyond just superficial wounds to our national pride, the outsourcing of corporate decision-making authority over Canadian companies has been a disaster for workers and consumers.

Policymakers should do more to keep Canadian companies in Canadian hands by, among other things, providing more support to expand financing opportunities and awareness of untraditional ownership models, and beefing up Canada’s net-benefit review requirements.

Declining quality, brand reputation

According to a 2018 Ipsos poll, a whopping 75 per cent of Canadians agreed that the government should do more to stop the sale of Canadian companies to foreign investors.

This should come as no surprise because, after a Canadian brand is purchased by a foreign entity, many consumers notice major declines in quality. Following the sale of Tim Hortons in 2014 to Restaurant Brands International, a firm owned in part by Brazil’s 3G Capital, consumers noticed a deterioration in product quality and the company suffered a steep fall in brand reputation.

Unsurprisingly, as decision-making authority over corporate strategy moves further away from the consumer, brands are less able to respond to the demands of their customers.

Put more bluntly, should anyone be surprised that Tim Hortons hasn’t been able to figure out what Canadians want on their coffee break since being acquired in part by a private equity firm founded by Brazilian investment bankers?

The quiet sale of many Canadian brands has also led to major frustrations for consumers looking to support Canadian-owned businesses.

Trump’s tariffs have caused an uptick in demand for Canadian brands and strengthened desire to support the local economy. However, after further investigation into a brand, many consumers note that behind advertising leaning heavily on Canadian identity and a complex network of corporate holding companies, lies a foreign entity as the true owner.

Workers lose out with distant ownership

Workers are also feeling the impacts as Canadian companies are sold to foreign investors because, as corporate leadership moves further away from the community, so too does accountability, exposing local workers to the demands of foreign executives.

In a recent example, British spirits company Diageo announced the closure of the Crown Royal bottling plant in Amherstburg, Ont., putting 200 jobs at risk and drawing fierce criticism from Premier Doug Ford. Though Canadians might have been outraged, Diageo interim CEO, U.K.-based Nik Jhangiani, didn’t have to look any of the employees in the eye on his way into the office the next day.

And though foreign control of Canadian companies has had damaging impacts on consumers and workers, there is no end in sight.

Instead, foreign buyouts of Canadian companies continue to be a major driver of merger and acquisition activity. In the 2025 second quarter, 25 per cent of mergers and acquisitions involving Canadian target companies were by foreign buyers.

While Premier Ford’s hat might say “Canada is not for sale,” it seems our companies sure are.

Boosting employee ownership

In an era where, for the first time, Canada faces serious economic threats from the United States, one could be forgiven for thinking that now is not the time to restrict investment or foreign access to our economy. But if it means ceding control from Canadian consumers and workers, perhaps Canadians should think twice.

Especially as Canada is facing a major business succession problem; 76 per cent of small and medium-sized business owners plan to exit their business in the next decade.

To ensure these businesses stay Canadian owned, policymakers should be looking at strengthening paths toward employee ownership. Particularly as tax incentives for business owners selling to employee ownership trusts (EOTs) are set to expire in 2026.

Beyond simple tax incentives for business owners, policymakers should look at providing more support to expand financing opportunities and awareness surrounding untraditional ownership models, like co-operatives and EOTs.

While co-operatives and EOTs have proven to be successful in protecting jobs, driving productivity and building wealth for local employees, a chronic lack of awareness holds these models back, preventing more inclusive ownership of Canada’s economy.

For larger companies, the review threshold at which most acquisitions by foreign investors are scrutinized should be lowered, ensuring more foreign takeovers are reviewed before a deal is signed.

What’s in it for us?

The net-benefit-to-Canada criteria should also be broadened to ensure more consideration is placed on local employment and benefits to local consumers.

More stringent regulation should be placed on private equity firms, particularly as their presence expands across the Canadian economy, often by leveraging aggressive tactics to buy up Canadian businesses, such as saddling companies with debt or by consolidating fragmented industries.

Too many iconic Canadian companies have already been sold to foreign investors and Canadians are worse off because of it.  More needs to be done to keep Canadian companies just that – Canadian.


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