Will Gornall: Carney’s Canada Strong Fund promises both strong returns and nation-building. In practice, promising both financial returns and nation-building often means being accountable for neither.

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Prime Minister Mark Carney’s recently announced Canada Strong Fund has lofty goals: It will help transform the economy, supercharge innovation and create good-paying jobs.
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It will do all that while delivering strong commercial returns and building wealth for Canadians.
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Unfortunately for Canadians, there ain’t no free lunch.
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Public investment institutions can and do generate strong, market-rate returns. We have proof of that right here at home with CPP Investments, which manages Canada Pension Plan assets. But it generates those returns through a laser-like focus on returns: not good-paying Canadian jobs, not transforming Canada, not supercharging Canadian innovation.
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The proof is in the portfolio: as of its 2025 annual report, CPP Investments invested roughly $7 abroad for every $1 it invested in Canada. CPP Investments sends capital overseas for a simple reason: its job is to maximize returns for Canadian retirees, not to serve Canada’s industrial policy.
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The Canada Strong Fund promises both strong returns and nation-building. In practice, promising both financial returns and nation-building often means being accountable for neither. Once a project is labelled “nation-building,” weak commercial discipline can be recast as public purpose. Carney may be disciplined enough to manage these risks, but the institution has to survive successors who are not.
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Trans Mountain is the cautionary example. In 2018, Kinder Morgan threatened to abandon the project, citing political, regulatory and construction risks. Ottawa stepped in, bought the project for $4.5 billion, and described the transaction as a “sound investment opportunity” that would offer a “solid return on investment for Canadians.” At the time, the expansion was expected to cost $7.4 billion. The latest estimate is $34.2 billion. Whatever its nation-building value, it’s hard to call that a great investment.
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Taxpayer-backed industrial policy can do more than become a financial boondoggle; it can crowd out private capital. You wouldn’t build a lemonade stand today if you thought the government might offer free lemonade next door tomorrow.
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Private investors face the same problem. Why spend years developing a pipeline, mine, port or power project if a future government-backed fund will finance a competitor on softer terms, accept lower returns or absorb risks private capital can’t? If managers think the state may over-invest, underprice capital or back politically preferred competitors, the Canada Strong Fund could deter private investment rather than catalyze it.
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I’m not opposed to all government investment. Small- and mid-sized enterprises can face a real financing gap: many are too large or complex for standard small-business lending but too small for capital markets. That market is inefficient and fragmented, and the Crown corporation Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) appears to play a useful role serving businesses that fall through the cracks. But multibillion-dollar pipelines are in a different financial universe from the small- and mid-sized enterprises BDC serves.
