I wanted to address your question about regulation, because Mr. Fontana raised it as well. I want to come back to the example of the Netherlands, because this is not a matter of deregulation; it's not a matter of taking away, or reducing standards, or anything like that. It's simply reducing what it takes to comply with the regulations.
Garth talked about measurement. That's what's important. What the Netherlands did is come up with a basic methodology. How many people, at what wage rates, have to fill out how many forms, for how long, how often? That gave them a number to start with. Once they had that number, they said: we want to reduce that paper burden by 25% over four years. That's scheduled to be up next year, in 2007.
The estimated savings to the economy of the Netherlands is 4 billion euros for businesses, a 1.7% increase in labour productivity, and a 1.5% rise in GDP. That's saying that measuring what you're making people do, finding out ways to make it simpler for them to do it, and then bringing that burden down over time can have a really meaningful impact on competitiveness and on economic growth.