Reading Tom Axworthy’s excellent review of Donald Abelson’s third book on think tanks and U.S. foreign policy, I am nonetheless struck by a couple of dichotomies:
–Canada’s think tanks have not been distracted much by military/foreign policy issues since Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, by policy diktat, diminished Canada’s relevance regarding these issues a very long time ago. Individual academics have addressed them to some extent since then, but in a much less influential manner than American institutes.
–A profound difference between Canadian and American think tanks is that Canada has a permanent public service where senior deputies absorb changes in government, parties and philosophy. The U.S. does not. So U.S. think tanks become hatcheries for new administrations, which is not the case in Canada.
In that light, Mr. Axworthy’s lament for the demise of the Economic Council of Canada is misplaced. As an organizational model for a publicly funded think tank, it was deeply flawed. From the perspective of input/output and the efficient use of taxpayer dollars, it needed either wholesale institutional reform or extinction. Moreover, his review does not discuss the Canadian versions of the book’s main preoccupation, privately funded U.S. think tanks, many of which Mr. Abelson believes to be ideologically motivated and excessively influential.
This is not the case here, although think tanks are flourishing. True, some operate from a more fixed ideological perspective. Others encourage diversity, combining singular academic disciplines with permanent analysts’ perspectives. Best of all, some combine a multidisciplinary approach.
But are they influential? In my ten years of directing one such privately funded institute, the C.D. Howe, only once did I have proof of influence. After the Meech Lake/Charlottetown accord fiascos, I was invited to Ottawa by senior permanent public servants who proffered their thanks for the output that the institute had provided at a time when the permanent public service had been decimated by budget cuts. That struck me as proof. Generally, the public service does not deign to admit such influence.
Accordingly, think tanks in Canada must seek out publicity to encourage public, parliamentary and political/civil service debate and attention. This is not self-aggrandizing, seeking publicity to raise money. It is a necessity: privately funded think tanks have hard-nosed boards of directors who decide whether the goals are being met or not. Being heard is important.
To conclude, in Canada there are two huge policy voids: foreign affairs and military issues are long overdue for rethinking. Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s defining mid-August speeches on northern sovereignty established that. As did his government’s affirmation of Canada’s military commitment to fight global terrorism in Afghanistan. On both issues, outdated assumptions still dominate. For Canada’s think tanks, this is the next frontier.