I will answer in English.
Dr. Hejazi, I think, made the argument that investment in foreign affiliates abroad helps the Canadian economy in a variety of ways. That can be true, and I think we should wish Canadian corporations well in foreign markets. But there's no question that if our goal is to encourage activity in Canada, it makes sense to structure our tax system to promote activity in Canada rather than to promote Canadian investment in foreign countries and hope that some of the benefits trickle back to Canada. That's just a matter of common sense.
So certainly I believe that the effect of tax havens on the Canadian economy is bad both in terms of drawing investment out of Canada and in terms of reducing the tax revenues available to the Canadian government to promote economic activity here. That's essentially my response in a nutshell.
If Canada were to adopt a worldwide system of taxation for Canadian-based corporations, the effect it would have is really to shield us from these tax havens, because Canadian companies would pay the Canadian tax rate regardless of where they operated in the world. If they wanted to have a foreign affiliate in Barbados that—