Generated by GPT-5-mini| Ministère de l'Économie et de l'Innovation (Québec) | |
|---|---|
| Name | Ministère de l'Économie et de l'Innovation (Québec) |
| Jurisdiction | Québec |
| Headquarters | Québec City |
Ministère de l'Économie et de l'Innovation (Québec)
The Ministère de l'Économie et de l'Innovation (Québec) is the provincial ministry responsible for economic development, industrial strategy, innovation policy and commercial affairs in Québec. It interacts with provincial actors such as Premier of Québec, National Assembly of Quebec, and Crown corporations including Société de développement des entreprises culturelles and regulatory bodies like Autorité des marchés financiers. The ministry coordinates with federal institutions such as Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, Export Development Canada, and international partners including Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and European Union delegations.
The ministry traces antecedents to departments established under premiers like Jean Lesage, Robert Bourassa, and René Lévesque, evolving through reforms tied to events such as the Quiet Revolution and the constitutional debates around the Meech Lake Accord. Reorganizations in the 1990s and 2000s reflected shifts under administrations of Daniel Johnson Sr., Lucien Bouchard, and Jean Charest to integrate industrial policy with technology strategy, influenced by global developments including the Dot-com bubble and agreements like the North American Free Trade Agreement. Its mandate has been reshaped by crises such as the 2008 financial crisis and recovery programs akin to measures by International Monetary Fund missions and initiatives promoted by World Bank forums.
The ministry’s responsibilities encompass support for sectors such as aerospace linked to Bombardier Aerospace, information technology tied to Shopify, pharmaceuticals related to Apotex collaborations, and natural resource value chains including firms like ArcelorMittal operations in Sept-Îles. It administers programs interfacing with agencies like Investissement Québec, engages in trade promotion with partners in China and United States–Mexico relations, and implements innovation frameworks resonant with policies from European Commission research directives and standards from International Organization for Standardization.
The ministry is led by a cabinet minister appointed by the Premier of Québec and supported by deputy ministers and directors who liaise with provincial entities such as Ministry of Finance (Quebec), Ministry of Education and Higher Education (Québec), and Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources (Quebec). Internal branches manage functions comparable to divisions in National Research Council (Canada) and coordinate with centers of expertise like Centre de recherche du CHUM and academic partners such as Université de Montréal, McGill University, Université Laval, École de technologie supérieure, and Concordia University.
The ministry administers investment attraction programs resembling initiatives by Québecor partnerships, export assistance aligned with Export Development Canada tools, and research credits similar to those advocated by Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers debates. It supports incubators and accelerators connected with Centech, fosters clusters similar to MaRS Discovery District, and funds applied research in collaboration with institutions such as Institut national de la recherche scientifique and industry consortia like Aerospace Industries Association of Canada. It has launched regional economic development plans for areas including Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine and Laurentides and special measures for sectors affected by events like the COVID-19 pandemic.
Funding for the ministry comes through provincial appropriations authorized by the National Assembly of Quebec and is allocated across subsidies, tax credits, and loan programs delivered via Investissement Québec and partnership vehicles similar to Business Development Bank of Canada. Its budgetary priorities reflect fiscal frameworks debated in budgets such as those presented by finance ministers like Nicolas Marceau and are influenced by macroeconomic indicators tracked by institutions like Bank of Canada and agencies producing reports akin to those from Statistics Canada.
Key affiliated entities include Investissement Québec, Société de développement des entreprises culturelles, and Crown corporations analogous to Hydro-Québec in their regional economic role. The ministry works with regulatory and advisory bodies such as Autorité des marchés financiers, regional development agencies like Société du Plan Nord stakeholders, and public research organizations comparable to National Research Council (Canada) laboratories. Collaboration extends to private-sector anchors including Bombardier Aerospace, CAE Inc., Biosense Webster, and technology firms such as Lightspeed POS and Shopify.
Proponents credit the ministry with advancing cluster development linked to successes in aerospace led by Bombardier Aerospace and in artificial intelligence associated with researchers from MILA (Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute), while critics point to concerns raised in reports by organizations like Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and disputes resembling controversies involving SNC-Lavalin over economic governance and procurement. Debates focus on measures of effectiveness similar to analyses by Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and calls for transparency echoed by watchdogs such as Transparency International in contexts comparable to provincial procurement reform.
Category:Government of Québec