Tim Sargent
180 posts

Tim Sargent
@TCSargent
Director, Domestic Policy and Senior Fellow @MLInstitute. Fmr Canadian Deputy Minister and G7/G20 Finance Deputy.

Making Canada stronger at home to have more leverage abroad requires us to deepen old friendships. I spoke with British parliamentarians and business leaders tonight about the immense opportunity of a new partnership with the UK, New Zealand, and Australia for closer ties on trade and security to boost growth, create jobs, and strengthen the leverage of our countries.

@afneil Very true, we could increase defence by 50% just by scrapping Net Zero.












Not an expert, but from what I've read, it's part of what i think we should call "anglo disease." It's a problem all anglo countries seem to suffer from. Tldr, our legal systems means that projects get treated like court cases which means they get mired down in endless process. The common law system is one of the great inheritances of our cultures and worth protecting, but that doesn't mean it is always perfect and this is one of the examples where it creates unintended consequences. Recommend reading the article i've shared below, but some key takeaways: -Infrastructure projects often face delays and high costs because of objections and risks that project leaders must address to avoid their projects being stopped. -Planning objections are not fixed problems; they are often created by professional services firms, which project leaders hire to anticipate and mitigate risks. -Projects spend a lot of money on risk prevention because even minor objections can lead to significant delays or project cancellations. -Anglosphere countries use a "judicial" infrastructure planning system, where decisions are made like court cases, with project leaders and objectors presenting evidence. This is a consequence of the common law system. transport-leaders-club.kit.com/posts/the-hidd…














