Back in 1986, Diane Franciss hard-hitting Controlling Interest
revealed the startling fact that one-third of Canadas wealth was
in the hands of just 32 families and five conglomerates. At the
time, Bernie Ghert, president of Cadillac Fairview, prophesized,
In a number of years, there will be six groups running the
country. Was he right? Media coverage would have us believe that
the last two decades have only increased the concentration of
power. Diane Francis disagrees, and shes here to deliver some good
news: a positive transformation has taken place in Canada, with
both free trade and tough competition legislation creating a new
and better nation. This time the country is driven by players who
are ready to offer innovative policies and visions for the 21st
century. Combining extensive interviews with Canadas economic
leadersfrom individuals to families to international
conglomerates with Franciss hallmark incisive analysis, Who
Owns Canada Now? will be the most important and talked-about
business book of the year.
Of the 32 families who were profiled in Controlling
Interest, fewer than half remain major players.
Of the five conglomerates profiled, only one remains
intact.
A powerful new multinational castincluding Calgarys Clay
Riddell and Murray Edwards, Gerry Schwartz, the Burnetts, the Hos,
the Shaws, the Peladeaus and the Aspersare todays economic
drivers.
Canadians have been successful at building world-class businesses
and investing globally.
A look at 70 of the most successful Canadians, most of whom are
billionaires, shows that many are self-made; 11 were still in
school or in foreign countries when Francis wrote Controlling
Interest in 1986.
Financial reforms have shifted the balance away from an old boys
network of risk-averse investors towards daring Canadian
innovators.