Certainly, as you say, the major objective of the Doha Round was to improve the opportunities for developing countries in the international marketplace, and I think that while the current focus has been on discussions between the U.S. and Europe, the issue of development, improving the situation of developing countries, is still front and centre in the negotiations.
I think part of the reason so much of the focus is on the U.S. and Europe is that, in the case of the U.S., developing countries very much want to see some real cuts to the U.S. subsidies to give them a better chance to compete, and with Europe, they want to get some real access into the European market. It's 25 countries and growing, so they want to get some access to what is a very wealthy market from a development perspective.
So those issues are there, but the pressure is really on the U.S. and Europe as the two biggest players to make some real moves, and then we'll see whether they're taking the development issue seriously or not. For our part, we've been aligning ourselves very closely with developing countries and spending a lot of time working with them, because we have many similar objectives. We want to get subsidies in the U.S. down. We want to improve market access to a lot of different countries. So we've been conducting a lot of joint analysis with developing countries and doing a lot of work with them.