The adoption part is really strange. The rest is at least policy and trying to provide a service. But what does the government care what tools a private business chooses to use (outside of regulatory requirements)?
That part is to reassure the CEOs with companies valued just south of a trillion dollars (in some cases, just north!) and not much backing that valuation. This is all built on smoke and fairy dust anyway, so pointing to a nation planning 60% adoption is a great way to leverage even higher investment. The future!
The adoption part is really strange. The rest is at least policy and trying to provide a service. But what does the government care what tools a private business chooses to use (outside of regulatory requirements)?
That part is to reassure the CEOs with companies valued just south of a trillion dollars (in some cases, just north!) and not much backing that valuation. This is all built on smoke and fairy dust anyway, so pointing to a nation planning 60% adoption is a great way to leverage even higher investment. The future!
It is concerningly ambiguous.
They want Canadian businesses to be competitive/productive in a global market.