Yes, it could be part of it. I know that there are a number of small towns in rural Saskatchewan that have more people who are working in manufacturing. I can think of companies like Bourgault and Flexi-Coil. They started in a rural area, and SeedMaster and Seed-Rite. There are a whole bunch of different companies that started there.
The federal government, I think, has done a good job. I'll give credit to them when credit is due. I'll use canola as an example. It's a huge success. It was developed at the University of Saskatchewan. Some of the funding was used to develop the genetics. They took a crop that wasn't very popular around the world because of the poor oil content and developed a product that was really marketable. It's been a huge success. It is, for the better part, a major contributor to our agriculture GDP in Saskatchewan. Livestock is important and the genetic research that went into it to improve that industry is important, but canola is a huge success.
There is, I think, a good way to provide more money for research, to use machinery that's more efficient and things like that. There is a possibility to do that.