I'll tell you three things.
One is that Secretary Clinton and USAID have set up a diaspora alliance, which she announced a year ago, and we will see partnerships, and it will really get off the ground at the end of July. So we want to develop an infrastructure over time that is independent of us so that you don't necessarily always have to have us as the broker in terms of diaspora projects.
The second thing is that where specific diaspora know about specific projects, oftentimes the foundation representing that diaspora or some other has come to us with a specific proposal, and we've looked at it. If we believe that it creates enough value, we may co-fund it.
The last one, which we're most excited about—and we've tried it in Africa and in the Caribbean—was a marketplace. A lot of these members of the diaspora have actually made a fair amount of money, and they want to invest in the countries, but they don't actually have any deal flow. So we have developed an African marketplace and a Caribbean marketplace—and in these cases we did so with Western Union—through which we go find a bunch of small businesses that are interested in expansion capital, and we provide transparency to the diaspora in the U.S. We've done it twice, with Africa and with the Caribbean, and we're about to do our second African marketplace. We think that has a lot of applicability.