Or are we still preparing for a game the rest of the world has already started playing?
Canada often speaks about becoming a stronger global trading nation. But the real question is: are we structurally, strategically, and culturally prepared for what global competitiveness actually requires?
As the world becomes more regionalized, more interdependent, and more supply-chain driven, Canada risks falling behind, not due to a lack of opportunity, but because of barriers that prevent us from fully participating in global markets.
1. Europe’s Common Market: A Case Study in Regional Strength
The European Single Market is one of the most successful regional economic projects in history. With free movement of goods, services, capital, and labour, Europe gained:
- Scale: Access to a 450+ million consumers without inter-regional trade frictions
- Efficiency: Harmonized regulations that lowered compliance costs
- Comparative Advantage: Integrated supply chains that enabled advanced manufacturing, innovation, and high-value exports
- Global leverage: The ability to negotiate as one bloc in global trade agreements
The result: Europe became more integrated internally and more competitive globally. A model Canada admires but has never fully replicated.
Before countries can compete globally, they must compete as unified regions first. Canada must establish a true Canadian common market.
2. Interprovincial Barriers: A Self-Inflicted Competitiveness Problem
While Europe dismantled its internal barriers, Canada still operates like ten small markets rather than one unified economy. Different regulations, standards, licensing rules, labour mobility limitations, transportation restrictions, and construction codes continue to fragment the country.
The consequences are significant:
- Reduced competitiveness: SME’s spend more time navigating bureaucracy than building new markets
- Higher operating costs: Slightly different provincial standards create duplicated compliance burdens
- Difficulty scaling: Export-ready firms struggle to grow domestically before expanding internationally
- Weak supply chain integration: Fragmented regulations disrupt logistics and multi-province production
- Lost productivity: Removing barriers could add billions to GDP
Canada’s internal fragmentation weakens its ability to compete on the global stage where unified markets, not divided ones, set the benchmark.
3. CUSMA: A Critical Agreement Showing Signs of Strain
Canada’s most important trade agreement CUSMA faces rising tension ahead of its July 1, 2026 review.
Key challenges include:
- Perceptions of unmet Canadian commitments
- Disputes in dairy, agriculture, energy, automotive ROO, and digital trade
- An increasingly protectionist U.S. political environment
- A U.S. posture that signals moral persuasion is ineffective, and tariffs enforce compliance
Any disruptions to CUSMA tariffs, conditional clauses, or renegotiation would directly impact exporters, manufacturing, and cross-border investment confidence.
If we struggle to maintain stability in our most integrated trade relationship, how will we manage more complex ones across the world?
4. Canada’s Asia Strategy: Still Narrow, Still China–Japan–Korea Focused
Despite years of discussion surrounding the Indo-Pacific Strategy, Canada’s commercial engagement in Asia remains limited.
- Most Canadian exports to Asia still flow to China, Japan, and South Korea
- ASEAN with 11 countries and 670 million people, is now the world’s 5th-largest economy but receives only a small share of Canadian focus
- Many SME’s view Southeast Asia as “too complex” or “too risky,” missing opportunities in Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Thailand
Meanwhile:
- The EU, U.S., Australia, Japan, Korea, and the U.K. are deeply embedded in ASEAN markets
- A predictable supplier gap has emerged due to U.S. trade uncertainty, one Canada is not actively filling
- Canada’s Indo-Pacific Strategy is ambitious, but execution, resourcing, and SME support lag behind competitors
Canada risks watching the Indo-Pacific century unfold from the sidelines.
Summary: The Global Stage Requires More Than Intentions
To compete globally, countries need three things:
- Internal cohesion – one market, unified standards
- Stable and strategic external trade agreements – predictable, reliable commitments
- Diversified international commercial engagement – particularly in the Indo-Pacific
Canada is currently challenged on all three:
- Fragmented domestic market
- Rising CUSMA tensions ahead of 2026
- Limited engagement beyond traditional Asia partners
The Final Question
Is Canada truly ready for the global stage of trade?
Or are we still preparing for a game the rest of the world is already playing?