In terms of the trade impact, again, I emphasize that we're not opposed to trade, and we're not being protectionist in that regard. We need trade. A market like Canada is so small that we cannot support a viable auto industry focused on only our own market. It has to be focused on exports, and this is where foreign investment and two-way trade flows are going to be so important. The question is what the rules of the game that govern trade are going to be. We used a very effective trade strategy called the Auto Pact to build the industry, to bring it to Canada, and then we went above and beyond the requirements of the Auto Pact, because we were so successful.
With the free trade agreement, the bulk of the power of the Auto Pact was eliminated, and then in 1999, coincidentally, just as our industry peaked in Canada, the World Trade Organization began to argue that the Auto Pact was illegal. The argument was made at that point that we didn't need to worry about it, because Canada's auto industry was so successful. We said no, in the long run, things can change, and they can actually change pretty quickly. Unfortunately, we've been proven right. Nowadays, we produce far less value-added in the auto industry than we consume. That is why we have a large trade deficit.
We're not opposed to trade, and we're not calling to block trade. What we are saying is that trade has to be reciprocal, and we have to have global companies--it is, after all, the global companies that run this industry--adding as much value to the economy and the industry in North America as they take out with their purchases.