Prime Minister Mark Carney frequently talks about making Canada “the strongest economy in the G7.” That promises to be a tall order, which will require — among other things — advancing many more large-scale energy, mining and infrastructure projects in the next one to five years; streamlining Ottawa’s sclerotic project assessment and environmental permitting rules; and responding to recent tax policy changes in the United States, which have left Canada at a significant competitive disadvantage in attracting new business investment.    

The challenges confronting Canadian policymakers are daunting. Carney has inherited a sputtering economy crippled by years of weak business investment, zero productivity growth and an increasingly unattractive business climate — and now the new threat of sw

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