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How the Canadian economy can continue to benefit from U.S. battle with China

While the U.S. Federal Reserve continues to pour on stimulus in the form of low interest rates, a new Senate bill focuses economic development spending on beating China at its own game. For Canada to take advantage of the coming technological renaissance, it may need a clearer industrial policy of its own.

Experts here say Canada needs a clearer industrial policy of its own

U.S. President Joe Biden holds a semiconductor chip, a symbol of just one of the areas where the U.S. wants to keep its industrial sector in the lead as China's influence grows. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

When Jerome Powell, the world's most powerful central banker, meets with the media this Wednesday, nobody expects him to say thesoaring inflation we're seeinghas forced him to hike interest rates.

Despite data out last week showing year on year inflation has shot up to levels unseen for 13years, most economists expect the U.S. Federal Reserve isnot yet ready to end the stimuluslow rates offer to aneconomythat has once again become anengine of North American and global growth.

Some worry Canada will be left out of the hot U.S. economic revivial, due to the U.S. Buy America strategy, but a series ofdevelopments last week offer evidence that this country can continue to profit by supplying the needs of its bigger neighbour.

Still, asthe U.S. focuseson a battle with China for future industrial and technological supremacy, some experts here say Canada must up its game when it comes to industrial policy if it wants to take full advantage of a coming technological renaissance.

A different kind of stimulus

Aneven more powerful kind of economic stimulus may be set to brightenthe North American longer term economicoutlook following a new bill that sailed through Washington's normally divided Senate last week, aimed at countering China's increasing technological strength.

The smooth passing of theInnovation and Competition Act with support from both Senate Democrats and Republicans though it has yet to make it through the Democrat-dominated lower house signals a big step beyond trying to hype the economy with low interest rates as central banks have been doing. The newfocus instead is to targetthe fundamental twin drivers of economic growth:innovation and productivity.

Government investment in China's sophisticated economy has begun to challenge the U.S. on a number of fronts including technology and the U.S. is trying to fight back. (Jason Lee/Reuters)

Essentially, they wantto beat Beijingat its own game, using hundreds of billions of dollars in government cash to invest in key industries and technologies to prevent the U.S. from slipping behind China's recent technological great leap forward.

"It's really a bill to keep the U.S. in the technologicalforefront in competition with China which it sees as its adversary," said James Meadowcroft, a long-time Canadian advocate for industrial policy. Meadowcroft, a Carleton University professor in the School of Public Policy and Administration, is thelead author of a report on the very subject for the private sectorTransition Accelerator.

As for Canada, Bank of Canada deputy governor Timothy Lane noted last week thatthere are early signs that adaptation to the rigours of the pandemichas already generated business innovation by redirecting efforts into Canada's digital economy.

"There is a good chance that productivity growth, a key driver of potential, will be stronger than expected, giving the economy more room to grow before inflation becomes a worry," he told a virtual gathering of Western Canadian financial advisors.

And while Lane said there were increasing signs that the post-pandemic innovations were sprouting up on their ownin response to market forces, that's no longer good enough for the Biden administration. Nor, it seems, for the U.S. Senate.

'No longer a dirty word'

As CBC Washington correspondent, Alexander Panetta, has reported, if the Innovation and Competition Act act becomes law, it could put serious political and economic demands on Canadabecause it will not only usegovernment money to spur investment, but require its allies to scale back use of Chinese technology.

James Meadowcroft, a Carleton University professor who authored a recent report for the private sector Transition Accelerator, said Canada must follow the United States' lead and develop a coordinated industrial strategy. (Carleton University)

That will require some tough decisions by the Canadian government.

But speaking on the phone Friday, Meadowcroftsaid that one decision is obvious. If Canada wants to take a seat at the big kid's table where economic decisions are made, the country must develop an industrial policy of its own.

He said thatindustrial policycrucial in Canadian history for doing things like building a railway across Canada and developing the oil sandswent out of favour during the Thatcher and Reagan years. But it is"no longer a dirty word" and has come back into fashion, especially as a tool for fighting climate change.

In fact, he said, it never really went away, even in the U.S., where many industries continued to be supported under the guise of military spending.

Where did the jobs go?

In Canada, the government has already been targeting projects for special government support such as last week's $1.3 billion investment in a hydrogen plant. But Meadowcroft says Canada must follow the U.S. lead and develop a broader coordinated strategy.

One example he gives is in the electric vehicle industry where Canada already has a foothold, with the minerals,the battery technologyand the automotive manufacturing tradition, never mind plenty of low carbon electricity,where Canadian championscould so easily be purchased or co-opted by larger foreign players.

"But pulling all this together to build an industrial base will require strategic intervention by government," said Meadowcroft. "Otherwise we'll lose the opportunity and wake up in 15 years and say 'What happened to those auto jobs.'"

Follow Don Pittis on Twitter @don_pittis