Actually, I should that say in a number of missions I was involved in, the Canada trust funds that were given to the World Bank or to the IMF were used to help pay for the consultants who would work in various countries. That's done at the minimum. But I think more than just that should be the public sector contribution. In the case of Canada, we should think of this as really in a sense being a part of our overall foreign policy objectives, working with countries to try to achieve better growth and a better distribution of income in those countries. This of course goes to the importance of education and a number of elements to achieve that. There's a broad framework of issues that have to be dealt with. I think where the Canadian government could play a much more active role than just simply provide funding to the World Bank and IMF is to establish those institutions in Canada that can work with the private sector and governments in relating to a particular country.
Just to give you an example, at the University of Calgary School of Public Policy, we've already been doing some of that. We had Mongolian tax officials over recently for training on how to devise the right royalty system for their mining. When we had them here, we were able to use people from KPMG and a retired Alberta civil servant who worked at Alberta Energy. We have a number of very good people just on faculty at the school, such as Ken McKenzie and J.F. Wen--I could go through the names. We did sessions that were built on both theoretically what is the right system, and then in practice how you implement these things. For example, on the royalty side, some of our royalty systems in Canada are some of the best rent-based royalty systems that have been developed anywhere, particularly with respect to the oil sands, which is an Alberta government one.