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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsHistoric $6 Million SSHRC Grant Launches Canada's Productivity Initiative
The University of Calgary's School of Public Policy is at the forefront of a groundbreaking national effort to tackle one of Canada's most pressing economic challenges: stagnant productivity growth. On February 9, 2026, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) awarded its inaugural Policy Innovation Partnership Grant (PIPG) of $6 million over 15 years to fund Canada's Productivity Initiative, led by economics professor Trevor Tombe. This long-term partnership unites over 30 researchers from 15 organizations, including federal departments and universities across the country, to generate evidence-based policy solutions.
Productivity, defined as the economic output per hour worked, is the engine of prosperity. Higher productivity leads to better wages, improved affordability, and stronger public finances. Yet Canada has struggled, with labour productivity growth averaging just 0.3% annually from 2014 to 2024—less than half the previous decade's rate—and falling below the OECD average for the first time in 2024. This initiative represents a strategic response, leveraging social sciences and humanities (SSH) research to inform transformative economic policies.
Understanding Canada's Productivity Crisis
Canada's productivity lag compared to peers like the United States is stark. Business sector labour productivity stood at 83% of U.S. levels in 2000 and has since declined further, with post-2019 growth at a mere 0.5% annually versus higher U.S. rates. Factors include low business investment, regulatory hurdles, interprovincial trade barriers, skills mismatches, and underinvestment in innovation. The OECD notes Canada's productivity trails best-performing members, exacerbating issues like housing affordability and fiscal pressures.
Recent data underscores urgency: GDP per capita growth projections place Canada last among OECD nations from 2030-2060, 20% below the U.S. and 27% below the OECD average. For higher education, this translates to demand for researchers skilled in economic policy, labour markets, and innovation—fields central to research jobs in Canada.

SSHRC's Policy Innovation Partnership Grants: A New Era
The PIPG program, piloted in September 2025, funds sustained collaborations between postsecondary institutions and federal departments to address enduring policy challenges like productivity. Valued up to $6 million over 15 years, it emphasizes SSH strengths in understanding human behaviors, institutions, and policies. SSHRC President Ted Hewitt highlighted: “This innovative partnership will demonstrate how researchers, higher education institutions, and policymakers can work together to develop actionable solutions.”
Past SSHRC investments totaled $29 million in productivity-related projects from 2019-2023, proving SSH research's value. For Canadian universities, such grants enhance prestige, attract talent, and foster interdisciplinary work—key for careers in higher ed career advice.
Trevor Tombe: Visionary Leader Driving Change
Professor Trevor Tombe, PhD from the University of Toronto, directs the initiative. His expertise spans international trade, fiscal federalism, and macroeconomics, with publications in top journals like the Canadian Journal of Economics on productivity distortions. Tombe co-authors textbooks *Public Finance in Canada* and *Macroeconomics*, and leads Finances of the Nation, democratizing fiscal data.
“Productivity is at the heart of nearly every economic challenge Canada faces today,” Tombe states. His leadership builds on op-eds and policy advising, positioning UCalgary as a hub for economic research.

Strategic Partners Powering National Collaboration
The partnership spans:
- Federal: Bank of Canada, Finance Canada, Global Affairs Canada, Housing/Infrastructure/Communities Canada, Innovation/Science/Economic Development Canada, Statistics Canada.
- Universities: HEC Montréal, Memorial University, Western University, McMaster University, Rotman School (U Toronto).
- NGOs: Centre for the Study of Living Standards, Alberta Centre for Labour Market Research, Canadian AI Adoption Initiative.
Industry Minister Mélanie Joly noted: “Boosting Canada’s productivity requires bold ideas, strong partnerships and research that drives real-world impact.” For academics, this opens doors to postdoc opportunities in policy research.
Explore full details at the UCalgary announcement and SSHRC press release.
Research Focus: Key Areas for Productivity Gains
Initiative themes mirror Canada's challenges:
- Tax and competition policy (Ottawa).
- Interprovincial trade (Halifax).
- Infrastructure/transport (Vancouver).
- Talent/immigration/skills (Montreal).
- Agriculture/natural resources (Saskatoon).
- Innovation/technology/AI (Toronto).
Such research informs higher ed curricula, preparing students for research assistant roles.
From Summit to Sustained Effort: Initiative Timeline
Launched at the 2024 Canada's Productivity Summit (700+ attendees, speakers like Premier Danielle Smith), followed by 2025-2026 sessions. The $6M secures 15-year focus, contrasting short-term grants.
UCalgary President Ed McCauley: “We put our research excellence on the table.”
Implications for Higher Education and Research Careers
This grant elevates SSH in policy, creating jobs in economics, public policy, and data analysis at Canadian universities. Polytechnics and unis rethink programs for productivity-linked skills like AI adoption. Faculty benefit from partnerships, boosting tenure via impact.
Check Rate My Professor for insights on leaders like Tombe.
Photo by Janne Simoes on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Actionable Insights Ahead
Expected: Policy briefs, embedded researchers in government, conferences yielding reforms. Long-term: 6.5-10% GDP boost possible via competition alone. For Canada, revitalized growth; for higher ed, model for grants.
Professionals, explore higher ed jobs, university jobs, career advice, or Canadian academic opportunities at AcademicJobs.com.

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