At this rate, everyone will be working for government before too long (at home)
More businesses have been closing than opening in Canada. It’s time to admit it: We’re in an entrepreneurial drought
High costs, red tape, labour challenges and never-ending uncertainty discouraging the next generation of entrepreneurs
More businesses in Canada have closed than opened for six consecutive quarters, and more than half (55%) of small business owners say they would not recommend starting a business right now, according to new research by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB).
CFIB’s new report,
Canada’s Entrepreneurial Drought, Part 1: The Shrinking Business Landscape, is the first in a two-part series examining the growing imbalance between business creation and closures across the country.
The entrepreneurial drought, a sustained period of four or more quarters where business exits outpace new business entries, has been ongoing since early 2024. While the overall trend of business creation in Canada has been declining since mid-1980s, openings had mostly outpaced business closures. That’s not the case anymore. In the second quarter of 2025, exit rates reached 5.6%, while entry rates fell to 4.8% in Q4 2025, marking some of the highest closure rates and weakest startup activity outside the pandemic.
“Small businesses have watched governments hand out billions of dollars to multinationals while ignoring the realities on Main Street. Governments need to wake up. If we want a more productive and competitive economy tomorrow, we need more small businesses today,” said Michelle Auger, CFIB director of trade and marketplace competitiveness. “Small business priorities should be government priorities. That means reducing taxes, cutting red tape, and promoting investment and entrepreneurship across the country.”
The challenges behind the entrepreneurial drought go beyond business entry and exit trends. Two‑thirds of small firms said they feel unsupported by their provincial governments, only 3% strongly believed their government had a clear vision for entrepreneurship, while 73% are not confident in the federal government. High costs, tax and payroll pressures, complex rules, red tape, and ongoing labour challenges against a backdrop of persistent global uncertainty, all make entrepreneurship more difficult and less attractive.
Canada is an entrepreneurial drought, finds a new report by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB)
www.cfib-fcei.ca