Updated
Updated · The Hub · Jun 3
Canada’s Entrepreneurship Rate Falls 57% Since 2000 as Business Entry Lags Peers
Updated
Updated · The Hub · Jun 3

Canada’s Entrepreneurship Rate Falls 57% Since 2000 as Business Entry Lags Peers

1 articles · Updated · The Hub · Jun 3

Summary

  • Canada’s rate of self-employed people with paid employees fell to 1.3 per 1,000 working-age adults in 2022 from 3.0 in 2000, a sharper drop than the broader self-employment decline.
  • Business dynamism also weakened: the business entry rate slipped to 12.3% in 2023 from 15.2% 15 years earlier, while annual business entries were essentially flat from 2015 to 2024.
  • Regulatory buildup, fragmented provincial rules and tax incentives that can reward staying small are cited as key barriers to starting, expanding and scaling firms.
  • International comparisons deepen the concern: over 2015-2024, business entries rose 34% in the United States, 40% in the United Kingdom and nearly 86% in France.
  • The report argues weaker entrepreneurship is dragging productivity, wages and innovation, and frames the Hunter Prize’s up to $50,000 policy competition around reforms to revive firm formation and scale-up.

Insights

Is Canada's entrepreneurial decline a policy failure or a cultural shift away from risk?
Why are Canadian entrepreneurs finding more success in the U.S. than at home?
Could adopting Estonia's radical zero-tax model on reinvested profits revive Canada's economy?