Thank you for the question.
I think there are two primary drivers. One is a long-term driver, in that Canada has made efforts over many decades to be a more engaged partner in the Indo-Pacific, but frankly, we have spent most of our economic history tied to Europe, the United States and Central and South America.
As I said in my opening statement, the recognition of the Indo-Pacific region as having the fastest-growing economies in the world really was a critical driver for all of Canada and for all Canadian businesses. It provides opportunities to diversify our trade, to take advantage of an area of the world that will have two-thirds of the middle class within 10 or 15 years, and to recognize the economic shift that's happening from Europe and even North America to the Indo-Pacific region. It's real. It's coming, and Canada needs to be a part of it.
As a more recent driver of the strategy that I mentioned in the opening, I think the emergence of China as a significant economic and military power—and in some ways a disruptive power—has made it critical for Canada to engage with more partners in the region so that our relationship with the Indo-Pacific isn't determined by our relationship with one or two large players. I think that's going to be a very significant outcome.
Canada, as you will recall, became a strategic partner with the ASEAN nations in September, when the Prime Minister was visiting there. This is critical because I'm not sure there's another country in the world that has the hat trick of being a strategic partner with the ASEAN as well as undergoing free trade agreement negotiations with all of the ASEAN nations and bilaterally with Indonesia, which has a population of 280 million people.
I think those are the critical drivers that led Canada to the development of a strategy that is very well resourced. It encompasses 17 different departments and agencies of the Government of Canada. It means that we're not there as an episodic interloper in the region but as a long-term strategic partner, which we think will benefit all of Canada.