Canada needs to turn temporary resource profits into lasting wealth.
Canada is one of the most richly endowed countries in the world with natural resources, generating around $20 billion annually in provincial resource revenues. However, natural resources are finite – you can’t keep extracting them forever.
Other resource-rich nations have been proactive about saving some of the funds generated through natural resources in sovereign wealth funds. These are large pools of money owned by a country, invested in stocks, bonds, or other assets, with the goal of saving and growing wealth for the future.
Norway's Sovereign Wealth Fund surpassed CAD $2.5 trillion in 2024. Canada has the makings of something similar, but lacks a unified national approach. Our current fragmented system, largely dictated by provincial ownership and jurisdiction over resources (Constitution Act, 1867, S. 109 & 92A), leaves minimal lasting national assets derived from these revenues. Provincial funds, such as the Alberta Heritage Fund, are modest in scale compared to the wealth generated over decades.
This fragmentation exposes all Canadians to the volatility of global commodity markets, leading to boom-and-bust cycles that impact families, businesses, and investor confidence.
Furthermore, the accelerating global shift away from fossil fuels and the looming rise of critical minerals underscores the urgency of establishing a strategy that captures the value of oil and gas revenues while also capturing the value generated from other non-renewable resources. Without a coordinated national wealth strategy, Canadians risk missing the opportunity to convert finite resources into sustainable economic benefits across generations.
Establishing a Canadian Sovereign Wealth Fund (CSWF) through a voluntary, cooperative framework is the answer. It respects provincial jurisdiction while offering the scale, diversification, and stability benefits of collective investment, ensuring all partners and generations share in our natural abundance.
By starting now and committing to disciplined savings, Canada can build a fund that rivals Norway's success while ensuring all Canadians benefit from our natural abundance.
To secure Canada’s long-term economic future, Canada must establish a Canadian Sovereign Wealth Fund (CSWF) through a cooperative federal-provincial-Indigenous framework.
The Fund must respect constitutional resource rights while delivering shared national prosperity. It will rely on voluntary participation, diverse and fair funding mechanisms, and ironclad governance to ensure transparency, independence, and lasting benefit.
1. Foster Partnership Through Shared Benefits: The foundation of the Fund must be Intergovernmental Agreement(s) based on voluntary participation. The partnership will:
2. Legislate the Canadian Sovereign Wealth Fund Act. Create federal legislation that defines the Fund’s mandate, governance, protections, and operating rules:
3. Implement Diverse Funding Sources
4. Return Value to Citizens Through the Canada Dividend:
Beginning in year 6, allocate 20% of the Fund’s 5-year average net earnings (from retained earnings) to a direct annual dividend for every Canadian citizen.
In addition, provincial contributions will influence the share of national earnings allocated to residents—ensuring that the Canada Dividend reflects the level of commitment and participation each jurisdiction makes to the Fund. This structure creates a fair incentive: the more a province contributes, the more its citizens benefit.
5. Reduce Public Debt for Future Generations. Also starting in year 6, allocate up to 20% of average net earnings toward federal and provincial debt repayment, easing fiscal burdens on future taxpayers.
6. Leverage Canada’s world-class investment capabilities —
To manage the 25% of the CSWF allocated to active investments, Canada will leverage its world-class institutional expertise—such as that found at the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB). For the first five years, CPPIB will manage this portion of the Fund, focused exclusively on infrastructure and real estate investments in G7 countries.
A shared-services model with a dedicated management team will avoid bureaucratic duplication, keep costs low, and help the Fund reach operational maturity quickly. Meanwhile, 75% of the Fund will be passively invested in global index funds—50% in global equities and 25% in global bonds—providing broad market exposure at minimal cost.
To enforce discipline and protect the Fund’s integrity, strict operational limits will apply. The management team will be capped at 10 full-time staff with an annual budget of $20 million, indexed to inflation. The Fund will have no access to debt, and any breach of the approved budget will trigger automatic dissolution of the board.
Active management fees will be capped at 0.50% (50 basis points) of assets under management. Beginning in year six, CPPIB must compete for the right to continue managing the Fund’s active portion—ensuring performance, not entitlement, governs who manages Canadians’ wealth.
7. Ensure Rigorous Oversight and Transparency. Legislate enduring protections to prevent short-term interference:
Won't this temporary extra 1% levy burden Canadian families?
Let's be straightforward: no one welcomes a new tax, and had we properly managed our resource wealth decades ago (as Norway did), we wouldn't need this measure today.
We can’t change the past—but we can invest wisely now to secure our future. This 1% levy is strictly temporary, automatically ending after five years, and clearly labeled on every receipt as a contribution to the Canada Future Fund.
Every dollar is invested—not spent—and returned directly to Canadians through annual dividends starting in year six. For a typical family contributing $400 annually for five years, that’s a $2,000 investment that could generate thousands of dollars in dividends over a lifetime, just like Alaska’s Permanent Fund. This is a modest, time-limited national investment that turns a historical missed opportunity into permanent economic security, lower future taxes, and intergenerational fairness—for every Canadian.
Why would Alberta or other provinces contribute?
Because it multiplies their impact. Provinces that contribute unlock matching federal funds and secure a larger share of long-term investment returns for their citizens. Alberta, for example, would have leverage over every dollar it contributes—transforming temporary resource income into permanent dividends and national influence.
Could this discourage foreign investment in Canada?
On the contrary. A stable, sovereign wealth fund boosts global confidence in Canada's economic future, attracting long-term investments and partnerships across sectors.
By investing abroad and owning stakes in global income-generating assets, Canada strengthens its position as both a reliable investment destination and a formidable global investor. This creates a virtuous cycle: as the Fund grows, so does our economic credibility, attracting more capital, forging stronger partnerships, and enhancing Canada’s global leverage—economically and diplomatically.
How will political misuse be prevented?
The CSWF will be protected by strong legislation that keeps it independent, transparent, and focused on Canada’s long-term future. The Fund will be overseen by an independent board made up of trusted leaders from the federal, provincial, territorial, and Indigenous governments. These members will be chosen based on merit, and their terms will be staggered so that no government can control the board. The law will clearly ban any government from dipping into the Fund’s main capital, and will only allow limited, inflation-proofed withdrawals. To prevent political interference, no more than 10% of the Fund can be invested in Canadian projects—and only if they meet strict criteria. If a province or territory takes investment and doesn’t deliver at least a risk-free return after five years, they must repay the difference each year. In the first five years, the Fund will use CPPIB’s proven investment expertise, but after that, CPPIB must compete to continue managing the money—ensuring high performance. On top of all this, the Fund will be audited regularly, report to Parliament, and show its results publicly through easy-to-read dashboards. These layers of protection create a firewall against political misuse and keep the Fund safe for future generations.
Is the Canada Dividend financially feasible?
Yes. By tying annual dividend payouts to 20% of the Fund's multi-year average returns, the Fund protects its principal and guards against market volatility. This model, inspired by Alaska's Permanent Fund, ensures citizens benefit directly without jeopardizing long-term capital growth. For perspective, with the Fund's target of $500 billion by year 8 and a conservative 5% average annual return, this could generate approximately $5 billion in annual dividends to Canadians (about $125-150 per citizen initially, growing over time). Over time, the predictable and transparent framework maintains public trust and preserves the Fund's intergenerational purpose.
Shouldn’t we prioritize current needs?
It’s a fair question, especially when many Canadians are struggling just to get by. But the CSWF is built to support both today and tomorrow.
Starting in year six, every Canadian will receive a Canada Dividend—a direct payment to households that provides real financial relief, year after year. This isn’t just about saving for the future—it’s about building something today that delivers lasting support for families.
Rather than spending billions on one-off programs that vanish—or sending money to foreign initiatives that yield no return—Canada can invest those dollars and generate steady income: $500 million annually, forever, from a $10 billion investment. That money can lower future taxes, give communities more control, and finally break the boom-and-bust cycle that’s held us back for generations. This is about being smart with what we have now—so our kids and grandkids aren’t left choosing between broken services or higher taxes later. It’s a modest, shared commitment today that builds real security for every Canadian, forever.
Isn’t this just another version of the National Energy Program?
No, provincial participation in the fund will be voluntary, provincial jurisdiction over natural resources will not change, and no price controls would be involved. The only new mechanism would be a windfall tax on natural resource corporations during periods of extraordinary profits.
How will the CSWF be managed?
The Fund will be managed with a single, clear goal: to grow Canadians’ wealth over the long term while keeping costs low and discipline high. To achieve this, the CSWF will adopt a passive, index-based strategy, with 75% of assets invested passively—split between 50% in global equities and 25% in global bonds. The remaining 25% will be actively managed by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) for the first five years, focused exclusively on infrastructure and real estate investments in G7 countries. This balanced structure supports stable, diversified growth while providing exposure to real assets that can help protect against inflation and deliver long-term value. After year five, CPPIB will be required to compete for the right to continue managing the active portion—ensuring that performance, not politics or entitlement, drives who manages Canadians’ wealth.
The time to act is now. Every day we wait is another day of resource wealth lost—wealth that could have been invested to secure our future.
A Canadian Sovereign Wealth Fund is more than just economic policy. It’s a promise to each other, and to the generations that will follow. The evidence is clear: Norway’s fund has grown to over $2.5 trillion, helping stabilize its economy for the long term. In Alaska, annual dividends enjoy strong bipartisan support because they put real money in people’s pockets.
Every Canadian—no matter where they live, what they believe, or where they come from—stands to benefit. A temporary 1% contribution on non-food items, with a firm five-year limit, will help build a permanent source of income for Canadians. It’s like saving for retirement or a child’s education: a small, smart commitment today that creates lasting freedom and financial security tomorrow.
The Fund will be protected by strong laws, independent oversight, inflation-proofing, and full transparency. Every dollar contributed will be shielded from political misuse and focused solely on long-term results. This Fund belongs to Canadians—not to politicians—and it will work for Canadians, forever.
This is our chance to turn Canada’s natural wealth into a permanent economic engine. Just as past generations built the roads, bridges, and institutions we depend on today, we now have the opportunity—and responsibility—to build the financial foundation for a stronger, more secure future for all.
Now is our moment to act—not just for ourselves, but for every Canadian who comes next.