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TORONTO, ONTARIO-(Marketwired - June 13, 2013 06:00 ET )
http://www.marketwired.com/press-release/boosting-productivity.htm
Deloitte study finds more than a third of companies are unaware they're underinvesting
Canadian businesses that think they're investing enough in their own growth, but are actually underinvesting compared to their peers, are a significant cause of Canada's persistent and growing productivity gap with the rest of the world, according to the latest in Deloitte's series of studies on the future of productivity, released today.
The report, The future of productivity: A wake-up call for Canadian companies, overturns a long-held assumption about the cause of Canada's lagging productivity. While it has been suggested that many companies are complacent and don't want to grow, Deloitte found that these "static" companies make up just 14 percent of Canadian firms. The rest are eager to grow and willing to take risks, but 36 percent of them are "overconfident" - they are completely unaware that they are investing significantly less than their counterparts. As a result, they have failed to take advantage of the many productivity improvement policies and incentives put in place by governments in recent decades to grow their businesses. The report suggests that changing the behaviour of these companies through better competitive intelligence offers the best opportunity to start reversing the decline in relative productivity performance that has seen Canada fall to 13th among 16 peer countries.
"This is not a case of governments in Canada failing to do enough to help companies innovate and boost productivity, nor are these companies reluctant to invest," said Bill Currie, Deloitte's Managing Director for the Americas and co-author of The Future of Productivity series. "These overconfident firms need to realize that they aren't investing enough in research and development, machinery and equipment, and information and communication technology compared to their competitors. For most of them, it's a case of solving a problem they aren't even aware exists."
The report praised Canadian businesses that invest above the median for their size and sector and are helping to drive growth through their productivity-enhancing investments. It also noted that overconfident firms share many traits with these dynamic, growth-oriented companies. Deloitte believes that if overconfident firms had a better understanding of how their investments compare with those of their competitors, they would change their behaviour and live up to how they see themselves - as risk-taking, highly competitive innovators.
"With better information, overconfident firms could be motivated to increase their investment levels, which could decrease Canada's spending disparity with the United States by 29 per cent," said Mr. Currie. "Many businesses are still unaware of how such information could help benchmark their investment and strategic decisions, or the importance of understanding how their investment levels compare to their peers."
Today's report is the third in Deloitte's ongoing series of studies into the future of productivity. The first report, An eight-step game plan for Canada, was published in 2011 and showed that Canadian business leaders are more risk averse than those in the United States and are much more likely to avoid investment in research and development, relying instead on government support to pursue innovation. The second,Clear Choices for a Competitive Canada, was published in 2012 and demonstrated that rapidly growing companies are the greatest contributors to productivity growth but that few Canadian companies are able to maintain high levels of growth and most Canadian start-ups slow down or disappear, because they have not yet mastered the art of sustaining high levels of growth, which includes appropriate levels of R&D, M&E and ICT investments that drive productivity and help to deliver a competitive edge.
Part of Deloitte’s Future of Canada series
Glenn Ives Deloitte Canada Chair and Americas Mining Leader
gives@deloitte.ca 416-874-3506
Terry Stuart Deloitte Canada Chief Innovation Officer
testuart@deloitte.ca 416-874-4341
Jonathan Goodman Partner and Co-leader of Monitor Deloitte Canada
jwgoodman@deloitte.ca 416-813-2316
www.deloitte.com/...Canada/.../ca_en_future_of_productivity
Contents
Executive summary............................................................1
What we know about Canada’s productivity............................6
What we didn’t know was that they didn’t know.....................10
Overconfident firms............................................................11
Static firms.......................................................................12
Dynamic firms...................................................................13
To help close the productivity gap, close the perception gap.....15
Parting thoughts................................................................16
Appendix A – Productivity primer..........................................18
Appendix B – Revisiting earlier recommendations....................20
About the authors..............................................................22
Contributors......................................................................23
Acknowledgements.............................................................23
Endnotes...........................................................................24
Executive summary
The future of productivity
A new study by Deloitte has yielded some thought-provoking insights into the source of Canada’s productivity challenge. Previous studies have shown that despite a strong dollar, low
interest rates and a stable investment environment, many of our businesses invest materially less in the research and development (R&D) and machinery and equipment (M&E) (including information and communication technology (ICT)) that are vital to improving productivity. Our new research suggests that a significant portion of Canadian firms mistakenly believe they are making competitive levels of investment when they are not – causing them to slip behind their peers. This study establishes that attitudes and behaviours in Canadian firms about their investments contribute significantly to the persistent and growing productivity gap between Canada and other countries.On
What we knew about Canada’s productivity
Canada’s productivity challenge has long been a concern of federal and provincial governments. During the past several decades, these governments have made many efforts to modernize policies and provide growth and investment incentives to Canadian firms. As a result, we’ve stabilized inflation, opened the country to trade and foreign investment flows, reformed taxation of capital and
introduced some of the most generous R&D incentives in the developed world.
Over the same period, however, our relative productivity performance as a nation has been worsening. In the mid-1980s, the Canadian productivity rate was 91% of the U.S. rate. That figure has since fallen to 80%. Today, the average Canadian worker contributes $47.66 U.S. in GDP per hour compared to $60.77 U.S. per hour in the United States, placing us in the bottom quartile of the OECD.
Deloitte’s first report, published in 2011, identified that Canadian business leaders are more risk averse than those in the United States. Our next study demonstrated that neither company size nor sector composition have a meaningful impact on the country’s overall productivity.The same study did affirm that rapidly growing companies of all kinds are the greatest contributors to productivity growth. However, the growth track records of Canadian
firms revealed yet another inconsistency. While Canada provides an excellent breeding ground for new ideas,
alarmingly few Canadian companies are able to maintain high levels of growth. Compared to other countries, more of our start-ups slow down or simply disappear, in part because many of our business leaders are not investing in the activities required to sustain growth.
What we discovered: On
We asked firm leaders about investments in R&D, M&E and ICT as well as the barriers that prevented them from increasing their levels of spending. To help us better understand the factors driving their decisions, we also asked about their attitudes and risk perceptions.
The da
below the median for their size and sector contributing on
Compared to other countries, more of our start-ups slow down or simply disappear in part because many of our business leaders are not investing in the activities required to sustain growth.
Interestingly, we learned that most underinvesting firms don’t know they are underinvesting. Over on
Overconfident firms are Canadian companies investing below the median for their size and sector – but who are unaware of doing so. These firms account for the majority of underinvesting companies, which translates to more than on
? Static firms also underinvest in their businesses compared to their peers. But unlike overconfident firms, static firms are fully aware they are doing so. Static firms are stubborn in their attitudes: while they don’t face any higher barriers than others, they are simply content to invest less.
? Dynamic firms are the firms who knowingly invest above the median for their size and sector, and are well aware of their competitive position. These firms make up a large portion of Canadian companies – and they’re not the source of our productivity problem.
The Canada-U.S. investment divide could shrink by 29% Our findings suggest that attitudes and perceptions are imp
Encouragingly, these organizations share strikingly similar attitudes to dynamic companies: both aggressively pursue innovation and exhibit risk-seeking behaviour. With better information, they could be motivated to increase their investment levels – a decision that could decrease our spending disparity with the United States by 29%. Static firms, by contrast, are more risk averse, typically less innovative, less likely to operate in broadly competitive
marketplaces, and unmoved by incremental cost reductions, government grants and tax breaks. Changing the attitudes of static firms, however difficult, could potentially decrease the investment divide between Canadian and U.S. businesses by approximately 14%.
To help close the productivity gap, close the perception gap We hold that the combined productivity investments of Canadian businesses serve to drive national productivity growth. Therefore, correcting the perceptions of overconfident firms represents our best opportunity for significantly impacting the productivity problem. The challenge is convincing 36% of our companies to solve a problem they don’t know exists.
The solution is competitive intelligence. All firms – and especially those not aware that their productivity investments fall short – must pay greater attention to competitive da
The prevalence of overconfident thinking indicates that the productivity improvement policies and incentives developed in recent decades have fallen short of achieving the desired results. We suggest this was not a question of design, but because these initiatives were not understood as relevant and necessary by overconfident firms. If our hypothesis proves true, changing the behaviour of the more than on
The challenge: Convincing 36% of Canadian businesses to solve a problem they don’t know exists.
In 2010, Deloitte established a permanent research team dedicated to studying Canadian productivity. Since then, this group has carried out extensive research to better understand the factors behind Canada’s weak productivity performance. Our previous reports – The future of productivity: An eight step game plan for Canada and The future of productivity: Clear choices for a competitive Canada – explored Canada’s productivity problem, challenging assumptions and setting the groundwork for this year’s study. Some of our key findings from these reports follow:
We know we have a problem Canada’s productivity challenge is widely publicized, but many Canadians misunderstand what it means to improve productivity. Improving productivity isn’t about working more hours for less pay. It’s about helping Canadians generate more value per work hour – and typically getting paid more as a result.
For almost 30 years, Canada’s productivity (measured by the GDP generated in an hour by the average worker) has been growing much more slowly that it has in the United States and most other OECD countries. Over this same period, governments have introduced many reasonable policies and incentives – stabilizing inflation, opening the country to trade and foreign investment flows, reforming taxation of capital and introducing some of the developed world’s most generous R&D incentives.
Yet these measures have failed to produce the desired results. In fact, Canada’s relative productivity performance as a nation is worsening. In the mid-1980s, the Canadian productivity rate was 91% of the U.S. rate. That figure has since fallen to 80%. Today, the average Canadian worker contributes $47.66 U.S. in GDP per hour compared to $60.77 U.S. per hour in the United States, placing us in the bottom quartile of the OECD.
Demographic changes in the years ahead threaten to make the situation even more challenging. Canada’s population is aging and its workforce will soon begin to shrink. If we fail to turn around our performance and achieve rapid and significant improvements in productivity, ours will be the first generation in memory to leave its children less well off. (To learn more about how Canada’s productivity gap threatens our standard of living, see Appendix A). Canadian managers respond differently to risk
Canadian managers tell us that they’re just as likely to take innovation risks as their U.S. counterparts – but many of them fail to follow through with actual investment in their companies. In Deloitte’s first report on productivity, we also showed that Canadian firms with a low tolerance for risk are much more likely than their U.S. counterparts to avoid R&D investment and rely on government support to pursue innovation.
We’re not limited by size and sector
Company size and industry sector are commonly blamed for Canada’s poor productivity performance. Yet our research has shown that neither factor plays a key role.
Productivity growth is weak across all size groupings and most sectors (with retail trade being on
* Productivity gap refers to the business sector, excluding public administration, but including public education and healthcare. Productivity is defined as annual GDP per employee.
Firm-level growth is essential to improving productivity
Canadian firms that grow rapidly in terms of employment and revenue make disproportionately higher contributions to national productivity. These growing companies are broadly distributed across small, medium and large firms in every sector. And while this may not be a surprising finding, it is an imp
High-growth Canadian firms struggle to sustain that growth
Regardless of size or sector, few Canadian firms are able to sustain high levels of growth. Ironically, Canada has on
Canadian firms don’t invest in growth
On
edge. Investments in new M&E and ICT would enable well-trained workers to produce more in less time – a clear driver of productivity.
“In most cases, outstanding performance is caused by greater value and not by lower price,” write Deloitte Consulting Director Michael Raynor and Chief Strategist Mumtaz Ahmed in their new book, The Three Rules:
How Exceptional Companies Think. They acknowledge that when incomes decline, companies can be tempted to slash assets and investments to reduce costs and improve financial results. “But great companies typically accept higher costs as the price of excellence,” they note, “putting significant resources, over long periods of time, into creating non-price value and generating higher revenue.”
Unfortunately, Canadian companies are far less likely than their international peers to make these investments in excellence. Private sector R&D spending is on
Canadian firms also underspend on both M&E and ICT: 2010 per-worker spending in these areas was 65%3 and 53%4 that of their U.S. counterparts, respectively.
To thrive over the long term, Canadian companies need to invest more in their own excellence.
Why do so many Canadian firms show so little interest in investing in their own growth, despite decades of declining productivity and government policies and incentives aimed at addressing the problem? Discovering answers to this question was the aim of our most recent research.
In early 2013, Deloitte surveyed chief decision makers (owners, presidents, vice presidents, directors, general managers, chairs, partners or CEOs) at 884 firms across Canada. Our survey was designed to provide statistically significant samples across company size, age, sector and geography.
We focused our analysis on underinvesting firms to better understand the attitudes and perceptions behind Canada’s lower spending. We defined these firms as those whose investment in R&D, M&E and ICT as a percentage of revenue was less than the median for their size and sector.
The bottom half of firms by investment on
What we didn’t know was that they didn’t know Figure 4 Underinvesting firms Overconfident firms think they’re investing more than their peers.
They don’t realize they’re actually underinvesting. We also asked respondents about their attitudes and risk perceptions, which led to some compelling findings. We identified two distinct groups of underinvesting firms. The first group, which we called “overconfident” firms, are actually unaware that they’re spending less than their peers. Firms in the second, smaller group are aware they’re underinvesting but untroubled by this fact (Figure 4) – we termed these “static” firms.
Our research showed that these groups’ attitudes and perceptions greatly influenced their decisions to invest in growth. This was particularly clear when they were compared to a third group we labeled “dynamic firms” who are aware they are investing more than the median for their size and sector. More imp
Overconfident firms
Overconfident firms believe they’re investing more than their peers – and don’t realize that they’re actually spending less and investing below the median for their size and sector. These firms account for the majority of underinvesting companies – which translates to 36% of all Canadian businesses. Yet our analysis suggests that if these overconfident firms had access to better information about how they stack up against their peers, they could potentially have a significant and positive impact on Canada’s investment and productivity gaps.
For on
Neither do overconfident firms believe they face significantly higher barriers to improving productivity than their higher-spending counterparts. These firms clearly have both the desire and willingness to invest – they’re simply uninformed about how their spending levels compare to their peers. While their current investments may not align with their willingness to take risks and innovate, their desire to compete is a strong indicator that a better understanding of their competitive situation will spur them to make greater investments.
In fact, we believe that it is entirely feasible to help these overconfident firms change their behaviour and live up to how they see themselves – as risk-taking, highly competitive innovators. If we can help these companies see that they’re under-investing, they would likely move to correct the situation and respond swiftly to government policies and incentives designed to foster growth.
Considering that more than on
Static firms
We termed another, smaller group of underinvesting firms “static” firms. These organizations are fully aware that they’re investing less than their peers and they’re comfortable with this choice. We found it interesting that there were relatively few of these static firms – on
Why are these static firms not investing in making themselves more productive? It’s not because they believe there are significant barriers to doing so. As shown in Figure 7, static firms consider most factors – with the exception of government compliance – to be a less significant barrier to improving productivity than other firms. They are more risk-averse than other companies and less driven to innovate.
This isn’t to say that static firms are making an inappropriate business decision. These firms may exist in a niche that allows them to continue to grow in spite of low investment and limited innovation; alternatively, company owners may be choosing not to pursue the company’s full growth potential. Significant support exists for the “niche” rationale: in addition to exhibiting lower risk tolerance and a much weaker focus on innovation, static firms operate in localized, less competitive environments.
On
Dynamic firms
While both overconfident and static firms require attention and further investigation, there are many Canadian companies who are knowingly investing above the median for their size and sector. These dynamic firms may share many attitudes and beliefs with overconfident companies – but their competitive awareness and high levels of investment set them utterly apart.
Dynamic firms are highly innovative and willing to take risks. Indeed, 66% feel they are very aggressive in the pursuit of innovation and 42% describe themselves as having a high risk tolerance.
They are also optimistic – 71% believe that the current state of the Canadian economy is positive or very positive. These firms deserve recognition for their commitment to driving growth through productivity-enhancing investments.
Figure 8 What impact would each of the following have on your firm making positive decisions to invest in areas such as R&D, ICT, M&E, or new skilled labour?
How do we convince Canadian businesses to solve a problem they don’t know exists? Make sure they have timely, accurate information about their competitive environment – and how they really compare.
Our research indicates that more than on
question therefore becomes, “How do we convince 36% of Canadian businesses to solve a problem they don’t know exists?”
The answer is surprisingly straightforward: ensure these companies have access to timely, accurate information about their competitive environment and how they compare. Currently, the scale and impact of the information shortage among Canadian businesses is alarming. But benchmarking is a readily available solution to this problem – and a critical activity that all businesses must undertake to ensure they’re investing competitively.
In their book, Raynor and Ahmed write about how vital it is for leaders to have a clear picture of their company’s competitive position and profitability. Yet, they write, “our experience shows that many senior leaders lack that clarity, primarily because companies tend to put too
much emphasis on comparing their present selves with their past selves and too often declare victory if they’ve improved. What they forget is that you compete on
All firms, particularly those who don’t realize where they really stand, need to get back to basics and pay more attention to competitive da
innovation stack up against those made by comparable firms. It requires a certain amount of courage for a firm to look honestly in the mirror, but to define, execute and maintain a winning strategy, a “no pain, no gain” philosophy must prevail.
Most businesses already gather metrics about their past performance – the focus should be on putting this da
We don’t want Canadian firms to focus on catching up; we want them be active in their thinking with the goal of overtaking their rivals.
Companies can find out what the competition is doing by gathering competitive intelligence and participating in benchmarking studies. Statistics Canada collects a considerable amount of information on Canadian business practices – including investment, innovation, profitability, employment and trade. Last year, the agency took a major step toward making this information more accessible to the Canadian public by introducing free standard downloads from their CANSIM service. Yet many Canadian businesses may be unaware of how this information could help benchmark their investment and strategic decisions against firms of a similar size or in the same industry. We recommend that this information be made more user-friendly by developing access tools that help Canadian businesses assess their current and prospective strategic position.
To further assist Canadian companies in creating an accurate picture of their investment competitiveness, we are developing a diagnostic tool that will draw upon our survey da
Parting thoughts
After three years of research, we’re convinced that Canadian businesses aren’t investing sufficiently in the firm-level improvements that are so essential to closing the productivity gap. Our latest study suggests that attitudes and perceptions are effective tools for understanding
why so many Canadian companies are underinvesting in key areas of their business.
The prevalence of “overconfident” thinking indicates that the productivity improvement policies and incentives developed in recent decades have fallen short of achieving the desired results.
We suggest this was not a question of design, but because these initiatives were not understood as relevant and necessary by overconfident firms. If our hypothesis proves true, changing the behaviour of the more than on
Appendix A – Productivity primer
In an economic sense, productivity is the amount of value (as measured in contribution to GDP) created by the average worker in an hour of their time. When we discuss improving productivity, we’re not talking about working longer hours for lower pay – but about finding ways to produce greater value in the same amount of time.
Achieving high levels of productivity means thriving firms whose employees produce non-commoditized products that can command a premium in global markets. As a result, highly productive modern economies tend to be characterized by skilled employees who are paid higher wages and enjoy superior working conditions to those of the average worker in less productive economies.
The gap opens
In the early 1980s, Canadian and U.S. productivity levels were comparable. Over the ensuing decade, the rate of growth in Canadian productivity consistently lagged that of the United States, opening a gap between the two countries (Figure 11).
This gap was sustained throughout the 1990s and grew rapidly over the next decade. From
2009-2011, U.S. productivity continued to grow at a healthy 2.1% per year, while Canadian productivity grew an average of 1.1% per year. By 2011, Canada’s output per worker was on
Canada’s productivity performance is also poor compared to other countries. From 2001–2009, Canada’s annualized labour productivity growth of 0.7% was in the bottom quartile of the OECD, far below traditional comparators like Australia and other small economies like Austria and Israel (Figure 12).
Higher U.S. productivity means the average U.S. worker needs to work fewer hours than the average Canadian to create the same value, as measured by GDP. To put the gap into dollar terms, the average Australian worker generates $2 more per hour than the average Canadian;
an American worker, $13 more; and a Norwegian worker, $29 more.
Standard of living
Most economists believe GDP per capita is the single most imp
? The employment rate of the country
? The number of hours worked by the average employed
resident of the country
? The productivity of the work done by those employed
citizens
Productivity is by far the most imp
Canadian employment rates and hours worked have both performed well relative to OECD comparators over the past decade. The obvious conclusion is that productivity growth is our most effective means of improving Canada’s standard of living.
Moreover, changes in Canadian demographics will force us to become more productive if we are to maintain our standard of living, much less improve it. Canada’s population, like that in most advanced economies, is aging. Today the proportion of our population over 65
relative to those 20–64 is 23%. By 2021 it will be 31%; by 2050, it will be 47%. As baby boomers exit the workplace over the next decade, Canada’s employment rate and hours worked will come under intense downward pressure. While some older individuals will
defer retirement, they’re expected to work fewer hours, which will drive down the average hours worked per employee. Faced with the unavoidable prospect of a falling employment ratio and a decline in hours worked, we simply must find ways to drive higher productivity growth in Canada. If we don’t, our standard of living will surely drop.
Appendix B – Revisiting earlier recommendations
We have selected the most promising policy ideas put forward in recent years by individuals and groups from academia, business and government, including the Conference Board of Canada, Industry Canada, and The Centre for the Study of Living Standards, as well as public figures like Kevin Lynch and Don Drummond, and earlier reports by Deloitte. Our goal is to summarize the options we believe would most effectively solve the productivity problem based on our most recent research findings.
Improving collaboration
Create a cluster strategy:
Deloitte believes that a national clustering strategy is necessary to capture productivity gains driven by clustering. This strategy is best directed at a regional level, not as a topdown
initiative driven by the federal or provincial governments. Local businesses, municipal governments and nearby universities have the strongest grasp of local strengths that can provide the foundation of a new cluster. The federal and provincial governments should collaborate with regional cluster management associations to reinforce the region’s advantages
and help create conditions that will support the implementation of a national strategy.
Increase collaboration with colleges and universities:
Canada’s science and engineering academics perform admirably in international publication
rankings, but our performance in the global intellectual property statistics suggests that many
of our great ideas are failing to make their way out of the lab. Universities and businesses should see themselves as part of a larger system that fosters the commercialization of new ideas.
Benchmarking:
Our new findings suggest that over on
accurate in their self-assessment – the best practice of periodically benchmarking against key competitors will provide imp
Fostering an open economy
Liberalize protected industries:
Sector specific protections should be reviewed across all industries at both the federal and provincial level to ensure that these protections remain to the benefit of Canadians. Without a clear public interest argument for protections, the goal of government should be to expose industries to competitive pressure, a move that will encourage productivity improvements.
Reform the Investment Canada Act:
The current review process of large foreign direct investments lacks transparency and likely has a chilling effect on foreign investment in Canadian opportunities. Deloitte supports the position of the Conference Board of Canada that evaluation criteria of the Investment
Canada Act’s net benefit test be made more transparent and that the on
Conclude priority Free Trade Agreements (FTA):
The government should prioritize finalizing high-potential FTAs with emerging markets as well as large-scale FTAs with the European Union, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Japan, Korea and India. These FTAs would encourage trade with major emerging economies that could potentially serve as new markets for many Canadian firms.
Build national and international businesses:
Businesses should increase their efforts to enter new markets. Our previous studies have shown that firms who expose themselves to the competitive intensity of a global market are more likely to enjoy higher growth, more innovation and better prospects than those
businesses limiting themselves to Canadian markets. Enabling growth.
Reform tax supports for R&D:
Currently, the Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) program limits the refundability of R&D tax credits to small, Canadian-controlled private corporations. This criteria creates a disincentive for investment in R&D by large firms at risk of experiencing losses in a given tax year due to competitive pressure or because they are in a cyclical industry. Given current U.S. foreign tax credit rules, the policy also limits the ability of U.S. firms to fully realize the tax benefits from their R&D activities in Canada. Expanding refundability to large and foreignowned firms would stimulate higher levels of private sector investment in R&D.
Support venture capital investments and angel tax credits:
Provincial governments and the federal government should strongly consider emulating
the successful angel tax credit deployed by British Columbia in 2003, which has since served as a driver of early stage fundings, job creation and tax revenue. Federal and provincial governments should also consider how funds earmarked to support venture capital, such as the $400 million allocation announced in the 2012 Federal Budget, can be used to encourage
increased private investment and the development of skilled human capital in this space.
Focus on growth, not size: On
recommendations in Deloitte’s last report was to provide incentives for growing companies regardless of size, sector or age. Traditionally, Canadian policies have been designed to focus support on small businesses. Our analysis shows this strategy is unbalanced, as small firms
are no more likely than their larger peers to grow rapidly and drive productivity improvements. The result is public policy that potentially focuses on on
Increase investment in R&D, M&E and ICT:
Empirical research proves that investment in new capital assets is closely tied to productivity improvements and innovation. Currently, many Canadian firms exhibit very low spending on machinery and equipment, particularly in the realm of ICT; this appears to be a key reason behind Canada’s productivity problem. Increasing investment in key foundational assets will
improve productivity for many Canadian firms.
Optimizing Canada’s talent pool
Increase inter-disciplinary learning and foster entrepreneurship:
The Canadian government should encourage universities and other postsecondary institutions to be more flexible regarding interdisciplinary learning, and create specific structures to encourage students to combine their specializations with business and managerial studies. These interdisciplinary programs support the development of engineers, scientists, artists, musicians and other specialists with an improved understanding of the business context of their specialization, as well as an enhanced ability to build and manage entrepreneurial activities around their innovative ideas.
Optimize our immigration labour model:
Government has an imp
the needs of Canada’s business sector. This can be done by improving the responsiveness and flexibility of the immigration system to shifting labour needs. The federal government should also consider improving the simplicity and transparency of foreign credential
recognition by implementing an application-processing procedure similar to the employer-driven model used in Australia where candidates must apply to, and have their credentials recognized by, the relevant regulatory body for their occupation before they are able to
qualify as an economic class immigrant.
Contributors
Glenn Ives Deloitte Canada Chair and Americas Mining Leader
gives@deloitte.ca 416-874-3506
Glenn Ives is the Chair of Deloitte, Canada’s largest professional services firm, and a member of Deloitte’s global Board of Directors. After more than a decade in executive roles at publicly listed mining companies, Glenn joined Deloitte as an Audit partner in 1999. He is the leader of the firm’s North and South American Mining practice and is a primary contributor to the annual Mining Tracking the Trends report.
Terry Stuart Deloitte Canada Chief Innovation Officer
testuart@deloitte.ca 416-874-4341
Terry is Deloitte Canada’s Chief Innovation Officer and a core member of the firm’s Global Innovation Network. Terry also leads Deloitte’s Financial Services Consulting Practice in Canada. In his Chief Innovation Officer Role, Terry is responsible for helping Deloitte create new solutions and offerings across its core services: Assurance and Advisory, Enterprise Risk, Consulting, Tax and Financial Advisory.
Jonathan Goodman Partner and Co-leader of Monitor Deloitte Canada
jwgoodman@deloitte.ca 416-813-2316
Jonathan is the co-leader of Monitor Deloitte Canada. Jonathan co-founded Monitor in Toronto in 1987 and was formerly both a senior partner of Monitor Group, and the head of the firm’s global strategy practice. Jonathan has worked closely with executive management at a variety of global corporations to develop business unit and corporate strategies, evaluate and implement M&A opportunities, create alignment of vision through organizational strategy, and to develop and execute value creation programs.
Acknowledgements
The Deloitte Future of Productivity team is indebted to Jesse McWaters and Elliot Morris, who co-authored this paper with the support of Michael Chan, Christopher Ho, Victor Lu, Natasha Sadr and Alexander Wong. We would also like to thank the many interviewees who took the time to speak to us and share their insights on Canada’s productivity challenge.
http://www.deloitte.com/view/en_CA/ca/.htm
Despite 30 years of government policy reforms and new incentives, Canadian productivity still isn’t growing as fast as it is in the U.S. and many other countries.
Yet Canadian companies don’t make the innovation and productivity investments they need to thrive.
We’ve discovered that 36% of Canadian businesses don’t realize they’re under-investing.
Our research suggests that firms’ attitudes and perceptions are key to understanding why Canada can’t seem to close the productivity gap.
Our recommendation: To close the productivity gap, close the perception gap
To spur Canadian companies into act
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