I think that's a good question, and I hope I answer you well after hearing the interpretation.
In any of these things, I think it's really important that you engage the appropriate NGOs in a country that can help deal with that. For example, we had some tax officials coming from Mongolia to Calgary and we talked about royalty systems, but I think to really have more success in a country it would be good if people went over to Mongolia but then you bring together at some point industry, NGOs, and the government, and have sessions where they hear people talk and can ask questions. That helps bring people to the same page, in a sense, on what's the appropriate way.
One of the important things to be done is bringing various people together. Even on World Bank and IMF missions when I went over, we just talked to government officials, and then we personally went and talked to people in the private sector to hear what they had to say. There was never a meeting where you bring everyone together. It's amazing when you share these things how much impact that can have, because people start understanding what the right principles are, what the objectives are, and they start having a discussion about that. I think that helps a lot.