It would do two things. It would do exactly what the IMF said. We'd come at it from two directions. First of all, it would create demand in the economy, which we've been lacking for years. We simply do not have enough domestic demand in Canada, so on the demand side it would elevate that side of the equation. On the supply side, it would clearly create a more efficient economy. I mean, an economy which has modern infrastructure has to have higher productivity. So I think what it would do is contribute to an increase in the potential growth rate of an economy, which is predicted to run around 2%. We could raise that up over the next decade. You might say that it might only raise it from to 2% to 2.2% and that's not very much, but 0.2% year after year compounded is absolutely gigantic.
I think you're right, Mr. Chairman, it comes at two levels, but what it comes at now is that we can't depend on a global economy to grow the Canadian economy. We need a domestically created policy to generate growth in Canada right now.