Canada’s regulatory burden has risen 37% since 2006 to more than 321,000 requirements, a load that National Bank of Canada estimates has cut GDP by 1.7%, reduced business investment by 9%, and left employment 1.3% weaker.
“The economic cost is undeniable,” National Bank chief economist Stéfane Marion said.
Business leaders now rank regulation as the No. 1 barrier to investment—surpassing concerns about the Canada-US trade relationship—citing overlap, duplication, and unclear rules that raise cost and delay decisions.

S&P Global reports Canada can take roughly 20 years from discovery to production to approve a new mine, among the slowest globally—deterring capital in resources, infrastructure, and transport.
On housing, it takes around 250 days on average to get a building permit—about three times longer than in the US. From March to April 2025, the total value of building permits fell 6.6% to $11.7 billion.
Compliance stacks up across files, with a series of new regulations set to hit the economy including package-label overhauls like front-of-pack nutrition symbols effective Jan. 1, 2026, the Federal Plastics Registry that goes into force in September 2025 with fines up to $1 million, and the Global Minimum Tax Act that is layered atop the corporate tax system.
Financial services face constant rule churn from multiple federal overseers; privacy rules are a federal-provincial patchwork; ESG reporting is fragmented across CSA, OSFI climate disclosures, voluntary CSSB standards, and new modern-slavery reporting.
The federal government had set Sept. 5, 2025 as the deadline for departments and agencies to table concrete red-tape reduction plans, alongside a proposed Red Tape Reduction Office at the Treasury Board.
Information for this story was found via Business Council of Canada and the sources and companies mentioned. The author has no securities or affiliations related to the organizations discussed. Not a recommendation to buy or sell. Always do additional research and consult a professional before purchasing a security. The author holds no licenses.