Canada’s Indigenous economy is currently estimated to be approximately $32 billion, but its growth is outperforming the total national economy. Moreover, the number of Indigenous youth can reach 1 million in the year 2027 and is increasing at four times the national average.
For indisputable reasons like reconciliation and justice and for others purely based in the economics, it is already a given for Canada to fortify and sustain the Indigenous economy. Economic empowerment of the Indigenous communities, their businesses, and their entrepreneurs is not only the correct thing to do, but it’s in all for the economic best interest…
The Future of Energy
Canada has a lot of energy resource options that most countries can get envy of – from fossil fuels to nuclear energy through uranium and to the renewable energy methods. However, as the demand for more power increases, environmental situations got worse, and other unknown threats got more plenty, then certain important choices have to be made.
With the constant evolution of technology, this series aims to understand the influential forces of Canada’s future. It will tackle the implications created by the methods of producing, transporting, and consuming energy and observe the opportunities lying ahead in the future of Canada’…
The Future of Mining
As a mining nation, Canada’s mining industry has provided the resources for a wide variety of important and essential applications and economic activities that include the required components for the manufacturing of digital-tech devices and the renewable energy necessary to power them. The industry also greatly impacts employment, infrastructure, and other economic opportunities in every region of Canada, especially the remote areas in the North.
This series, which is supported by the Natural Resources Canada’s Canadian Minerals and Metals Plan, provides interviews various experts from the mining sector, from the outlying …
The Future of Entrepreneurship
As of now, the lifeblood of Canada’s economy and possibly its future are the entrepreneurs and their SMEs. The start-ups of the present are the Canadian multinationals’ flagship of the future.
The challenge now is what will be the best series of actions to promote education, provide support, and give encouragement to Canadian entrepreneurs, without any biases against age, gender, or experience, to innovate and uplift the companies that will bring Canada’s economy to the forefront in the future.
This series, which is supported by the Canadian Business Growth Fund, illustrates the leaders of different sectors of the …