Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Fresh Government Creates Occasion For Tech Innovation: Vivek Kundra Ex-White House IT Official

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Oct, 2015 11:20 AM
    When Vivek Kundra started working in the White House in 2009, President Barack Obama was fighting "tooth-and-nail" to keep his BlackBerry.
     
    Seven years later, the once iconic Canadian-made smartphone has been relegated to an amusing anecdote for the United States' inaugural Chief Information Officer — and an example of the difficulties governments have keeping up with technology.
     
    Kundra, who managed an $80-billion information technology portfolio for the president, was in Ottawa during election week urging Canadian officials who oversee roughly $6 billion in similar spending to stay apace.
     
    "Change is the only constant. Just because you have one company that has done well today doesn't mean it's going to reign supreme," he said in an interview.
     
    "You have to be able to put innovation at the centre of your government policy. Because the future is going to belong to those countries that are constantly innovating. Canada has done it before, and can do it again."
     
    Kundra laid out his prescription for digital transformation in the capital as the federal Liberals celebrated their resounding election victory.
     
    He said it's an exciting time for Canada because a fresh government could initiate an era of technology-driven innovation that's essential to creating jobs and keeping the country competitive.
     
    "You've just had an amazing election, and you have a leader who has in front of him the opportunity," said Kundra, who resigned from the White House in 2011 and is now executive vice-president for the Silicon Valley-based cloud computing firm Salesforce.
     
    Near the end of the 11-week election campaign, several prominent technology entrepreneurs voiced frustration that no political party had outlined a vision for their industry.
     
    However, the Liberals ultimately committed $200 million annually for three years to help tech startups grow. They also promised $100 million a year toward an industrial research-assistance program, which encourages innovation in small- and medium-sized businesses.
     
     
    While campaigning, Liberal leader Justin Trudeau pointed out that Canada has fallen to 22nd place for innovation among leading countries, according to a report from the Geneva-based World Economic Forum.
     
    Kundra said countries, including Canada, will fall behind without a policy framework that embraces the future.
     
    He encouraged the federal government to examine technology expenditures, noting that within his first six months at the White House he implemented a crackdown on wasteful spending that saved the U.S. government $3 billion.
     
    "Are you spending that capital in the old world — on mainframes and mini-computers?" he asked. "Or are you spending that capital to create jobs of the future around data science and cloud and social and mobile?"
     
    Other high-tech initiatives the government should consider include designing policies to attract talent and venture capital and investing in "intelligent infrastructure" for cities, such as smart grids, he suggested.
     
    The day after the federal election, the country's largest high-tech association released a proposed agenda for the new government, urging a focus toward improving Canada's low innovation and competitiveness rankings.
     
    The Canadian Advanced Technology Alliance issued specific recommendations ranging from consolidating ministries for a new "minister of science, technology and business innovation" to committing 10 per cent of government procurement spending to startups.
     
    "We need 21st century leadership for improving Canada's business innovation performance and this must begin at the political level," said CEO John Reid in a release. "Now is the time to pivot to the future."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former Liberal Prime Minister Chretien Encourages Justin Trudeau To Engage With International Leader

    Former Liberal Prime Minister Chretien Encourages Justin Trudeau To Engage With International Leader
    During an interview with CTV's Question Period, Chretien suggested the incoming prime minister's father, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, maintained an open approach when speaking to world leaders including Cuba's Fidel Castro.

    Former Liberal Prime Minister Chretien Encourages Justin Trudeau To Engage With International Leader

    CSIS Operations Under C-51 With Foreign Partners Raise Accountability Concerns

    CSIS Operations Under C-51 With Foreign Partners Raise Accountability Concerns
    The omnibus bill known as C-51 allows CSIS to engage in joint "disruption" efforts abroad — including covert actions that break foreign laws — something the spy service previously had no authority to do, according to the government notes.

    CSIS Operations Under C-51 With Foreign Partners Raise Accountability Concerns

    Acitivists Call On Justin Trudeau To Defend Canada's Copyright Regime From TPP Changes

    Acitivists Call On Justin Trudeau To Defend Canada's Copyright Regime From TPP Changes
    A major part of the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal finalized Oct. 5 involves harmonizing copyright laws in the 12 Pacific Rim countries — including Canada, the United States, Australia and Japan — that are signatories to the deal.

    Acitivists Call On Justin Trudeau To Defend Canada's Copyright Regime From TPP Changes

    Tour Bus Fire Cuts Short Whoopi Goldberg Show In New Brunswick

    Tour Bus Fire Cuts Short Whoopi Goldberg Show In New Brunswick
    Moncton RCMP say there was a fire in Goldberg's tour bus, which was parked at the back of Casino New Brunswick in Moncton.

    Tour Bus Fire Cuts Short Whoopi Goldberg Show In New Brunswick

    Ontario Town Puts On Christmas Parade For Terminally Ill Boy Evan Leversage

    Ontario Town Puts On Christmas Parade For Terminally Ill Boy Evan Leversage
    St George is putting on an early Christmas Parade Saturaday in case Evan Leversage, who has been diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumour, doesn't live until the holidays.

    Ontario Town Puts On Christmas Parade For Terminally Ill Boy Evan Leversage

    Toddler Turned Prime Minister: Reporter Recalls Justin Trudeau's First Quotable Words

    Toddler Turned Prime Minister: Reporter Recalls Justin Trudeau's First Quotable Words
    On an overcast Christmas afternoon in 1973, a handful of reporters and photographers huddled on the snowy pavement outside the front door of Ottawa's Civic Hospital, waiting for the prime minister.

    Toddler Turned Prime Minister: Reporter Recalls Justin Trudeau's First Quotable Words