Thank you very much for the question. It's a good question.
What we're seeing right now in the Canadian economy is there's a lot of activity in the digital economy. While we don't have an explicit measure of the digital economy, the things that we do look at show there's very robust growth. Taking one measure, for example, if you look at GDP by industry, there's a category called computer systems design and related services. It's been growing more than 7% a year for the last five years. In value-added space, it's as big as autos and aerospace combined. So there's very rapid growth, a lot going on.
If you look more anecdotally in centres like Toronto, Montreal, the Waterloo corridor, Edmonton and other places, there's a lot of digital activity, a lot of investment going on in IP and research and development. Also, this has attracted the interest of large players to bring FDI into Canada, with them locating here, to benefit from the talent pool we have in terms of big data, AI and ML and a lot of artificial intelligence. By one metric, Canada has the third largest number of researchers in AI and ML, so we're well positioned to take advantage of this, and we see this as a really strong driver of the Canadian economy right now.