Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada Must Tailor Post-secondary Programs To Boost Economic Growth: CIBC Head

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Nov, 2015 11:45 AM
    OTTAWA — The head of one of Canada's largest banks says the country's post-secondary institutions are not producing enough graduates with the right skills to drive future economic growth.
     
    CIBC chief executive Victor Dodig told The Canadian Press in an interview Tuesday that much of Canada's eventual growth will come from entrepreneurs who commercialize new ideas and technologies for all sectors of the economy.
     
    Dodig credited Canada with boasting a high overall participation rate in post-secondary education when compared to other industrialized countries.
     
    "And yet, we have gaps — we're not producing the types of skills that industries need," said Dodig, who also discussed the subject Tuesday in a speech to business leaders at the Canadian Club of Ottawa.
     
    "A lot of people are overeducated and underqualified for the jobs that are needed."
     
    He said the country lags among its international peers when it comes to teaching disciplines that are increasingly important for innovation, such as science, engineering and mathematics.
     
    Dodig's comments come at a time when Canada has struggled amid an uncertain global economy and the sting of low commodity prices, particularly in the energy sector. Other industries, meanwhile, have been slow to pick up the slack.
     
    These factors have had consequences for Canada: the economy contracted in the first two quarters of 2015.
     
    Dodig said the country's schools must work harder to tailor the kinds of programs they offer to students to the specific needs of industry.
     
    "I think we've seen many points of light, but I think there needs to be a much more forceful debate, much more forceful effort in terms of driving that agenda going forward," he said.
     
    Dodig said the private sector also needs to help foster the innovation segment of the economy by providing more long-term financing for smaller Canadian companies that develop technologies.
     
    A primary goal, he said, is to help "start-up" companies grow into permanent, job-creating global players before they are bought out by even bigger firms from abroad.
     
    To help them get there, it's also important to have robust intellectual-property protection and to connect these companies to networks of advisers, he said.
     
    "We need to be doing this across our economy," said Dodig, who noted Canada should be looking to learn from models in countries that have been successful in helping innovators, such as the United Kingdom and Germany. 
     
    "We need to be doing this in the energy sector. We need to be doing this, clearly, in the manufacturing sector rather than wringing our hands about what we've lost in terms of capacity.
     
    "Rather than hoping that the Canadian dollar will be our single variable to drive growth, we need to be thinking about how innovation matters and how we organize around that."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    A Justin Trudeau-Style Gender-equal Cabinet Pledge For The U.S.? No Thanks, Says Donald Trump

    A Justin Trudeau-Style Gender-equal Cabinet Pledge For The U.S.? No Thanks, Says Donald Trump
    Trump replied that he has many, many women working for his companies. Perhaps even more than 50 per cent, he said. But he said he'd make cabinet appointments based exclusively on merit, not quotas.

    A Justin Trudeau-Style Gender-equal Cabinet Pledge For The U.S.? No Thanks, Says Donald Trump

    Premier Christy Clark Thanks Veterans, Families, For Their Sacrifice

    She is participating in a ceremony at Royal Lepage Place in West Kelowna, B.C.

    Premier Christy Clark Thanks Veterans, Families, For Their Sacrifice

    Bubble Yuck: Crews Melt Estimated 1 Million Wads Of Used Chewing Gum Off Famous Seattle Wall

    Bubble Yuck: Crews Melt Estimated 1 Million Wads Of Used Chewing Gum Off Famous Seattle Wall
    Crews are cleaning the city's famed "gum wall" near Pike Place Market, where tourists and locals have been sticking their used chewing gum for the past 20 years.

    Bubble Yuck: Crews Melt Estimated 1 Million Wads Of Used Chewing Gum Off Famous Seattle Wall

    Manitoba Graphic Novel To Raise Profile Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women

    Manitoba Graphic Novel To Raise Profile Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women
    The 19-year-old was abducted as she walked down the streets of The Pas, Man., in November 1971. Later that night, she was stabbed to death with a screwdriver dozens of times.

    Manitoba Graphic Novel To Raise Profile Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women

    Wicked Storms Slam B.C. Coast And Southern Interior With High Winds, Rain, Snow

    Wicked Storms Slam B.C. Coast And Southern Interior With High Winds, Rain, Snow
    Environment Canada has issued wind warnings for the north and central coasts, Haida Gwaii, northern and eastern Vancouver Island and the Sunshine Coast, with 100 kilometre per hour winds not due to ease until Thursday.

    Wicked Storms Slam B.C. Coast And Southern Interior With High Winds, Rain, Snow

    Serial Nanaimo Poppy Box Thief Released, Strikes Again: Police

    Serial Nanaimo Poppy Box Thief Released, Strikes Again: Police
      RCMP say a 49-year-old man was arrested last Thursday after police received two reports of money being taken from poppy donations.

    Serial Nanaimo Poppy Box Thief Released, Strikes Again: Police