---
title: "What Exactly Is the Canada Strong Fund For?"
summary: |-
  The Canada Strong Fund is trying to be a sovereign wealth fund, development bank, commercial investor, industrial policy vehicle, and retail savings product all at once. Until Ottawa clearly defines its purpose, it risks becoming a debt-financed vehicle searching for a rationale.
date: "2026-05-07"
issues: ["National Competitiveness", "Enterprise Policy", "Taxes and Budget"]
authors: ["Lawrence Zhang"]
content_type: "Blogs"
canonical_url: "https://itif.org/publications/2026/05/07/what-exactly-is-the-canada-strong-fund-for/"
---

# What Exactly Is the Canada Strong Fund For?

The federal government’s [recent announcement](https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/news/2026/04/canada-strong-fund.html) of the Canada Strong Fund poses one fundamental question: Why does it need to exist? If the Fund is meant to invest in projects that earn commercial rates of return, then Ottawa should explain why Canada's banks, pension funds, and private investors are systematically failing to find them. That is a strong claim, and one Ottawa has not bothered to make. The reason may be that the Fund's design and political incentives push it toward exactly the deals existing institutions and private capital would do anyway—where no such claim is needed.

The government plans to borrow [$25 billion](https://budget.canada.ca/update-miseajour/2026/report-rapport/pdf/update-miseajour2026-eng.pdf#page=62) to allow the Crown corporation to invest in “strategic” Canadian projects and companies, primarily through equity, alongside private capital. Further down the line, a retail product will let ordinary Canadians put their savings directly into the Fund, on the theory that they should share in the returns from nation-building. In both cases, the government expects returns to exceed borrowing costs.

But calling this a “sovereign wealth fund” is something of a misnomer. It is better understood as a government investment bank. Drawing that line is important because most sovereign wealth funds are capitalized not through borrowing, but through dedicated sources of national savings: commodity revenues, as in Norway, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait, Alaska, and Chile, or, in China’s case, current-account surpluses generated through mercantilist industrial policy.

Given Canada’s large resource revenues, the federal government could have asked whether a genuine sovereign wealth fund should be capitalized through dedicated resource royalties or [excise taxes](https://itif.org/publications/2025/05/29/fuel-for-thought-a-new-mechanism-to-fund-canadian-innovation/) rather than borrowing. The logic would be to convert part of Canada’s resource wealth into assets that outlast the extraction cycle: stronger manufacturing capacity, more competitive tradable services, and technology-intensive firms that can grow beyond domestic demand. It would also have avoided launching the Fund as another debt-financed vehicle, reducing the risk that it crowds out private capital or contributes to upward pressure on interest rates.

When it comes to the actual use of the capital, things are also fuzzy. Canada does not have empty pockets. It has banks, pension funds, private capital, the Canada Infrastructure Bank, BDC, Export Development Canada, the Strategic Innovation Fund, regional development agencies, and various other departmental programs. Canadian pension funds collectively hold over [$2.6 trillion in assets](https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/t1/tbl1/en/tv.action?pid=1110008401), and the chartered banks have [roughly $1 trillion](https://financialpost.com/fp-finance/banking/canadas-top-bank-regulator-capital-goldilocks-zone) in lending headroom above regulatory minimums.

To be fair, pools of capital are not the same as a willingness to take strategic risk. Pension funds protect retirees. Banks lend against cash flow and collateral. Private investors may avoid projects with long timelines, uncertain permitting, first-of-kind technologies, or weak early demand. But that is precisely why Canada already has public finance tools. Existing federal institutions are carved up by mandate: infrastructure here, exports there, business lending somewhere else. They are not generally designed to replicate private-market returns. They exist to fill gaps, accept lower returns, absorb risk, or correct market failures.

So if the Canada Strong Fund must earn market rates of return, why would private financing not already invest in these deals? The Fund’s implicit answer is that some projects fall between existing boxes: commercially plausible, nationally useful, but too long-horizon, risky, or awkward for normal investors, while still capable of producing market-based returns. That is possible, but it is a narrow category, and Ottawa has not shown that it is wide enough to justify a $25 billion, debt-financed Crown corporation.

The announced projects do not obviously fit that narrow category. The announcement refers to 15 projects and 6 transformative strategies across nuclear, LNG, critical minerals, and transportation infrastructure, representing over $126 billion in investment. Some of these, such as high-speed rail and nuclear plants, are unlikely to generate market rates of return. Ottawa has not explained how a fund committed to strong returns squares that circle.

The retail investment proposal only adds to the confusion. The Fund says it wants to give Canadians a stake in “Canada Strong” projects and allow them to participate in Canada’s growth and benefit from its financial returns. But in market-based economies, citizens benefit from growth primarily through higher productivity, higher wages, better public services, and the tax revenues that growth generates. They do not need the state to become an equity vehicle on their behalf. If the logic is that public ownership is the best way for Canadians to share in national prosperity, then the argument does not necessarily stop at strategic projects. It points toward public ownership of oil companies, rail companies, banks, housing, and more. Ottawa is not making that argument openly, but the rhetoric of shared ownership gestures in that direction.

To be sure, this is not a free-market screed against government investment. If anything, it is a critique of government trying to act like a private-sector investor while claiming the same return goals. There are many projects in Canada that deserve public support precisely because markets underprovide them: infrastructure with broad spillovers, first-of-kind technologies, strategic supply chains held back by permitting or anchor-demand problems. But the right response to those gaps is concessional finance, offtake agreements, loan guarantees, or direct subsidies. Those are defensible choices, and they are not the same as borrowing money to chase commercial returns.

The Canada Strong Fund is trying to be a sovereign wealth fund, a development bank, a commercial investor, an industrial policy vehicle, and a retail savings product at the same time. No single institution can run on five mandates. Until Ottawa picks one, it has not really made a decision at all.

---
*Source: Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF)*
*URL: https://itif.org/publications/2026/05/07/what-exactly-is-the-canada-strong-fund-for/*