I think what you're seeing from the U.S. is a real concern. I'll call it addressing the elephant in the middle of the table, which is Brazil, which wants to hide behind being a developing country, not provide any access, take every single provision to get away from it; and the U.S. is saying, “We're not giving up our export subsidies, our domestic support, and not getting anything from you. You're not hiding behind it, and until you start coming to the table on a realistic basis...”. Brazil considering itself developing in terms of agriculture is ridiculous, from that perspective. How do you do it so that it's real, so that the benefits don't come to one?
In the chicken industry, Brazil and the U.S. account for 76% of global chicken exports. Brazil alone will benefit from any opening in chicken on this ground--no other country. There's not a benefit for everyone else. It's a benefit for them, for they who have that cost structure to be able to leverage it. We have to look not just at the opportunities that are out there but at what's realistic.