It is clear that if a country is going to succeed, it is going to have to succeed on the basis of its brain power and its productivity and innovation, rather than through selling its natural resources. We understand what has to be done. We have to have well-trained people and we have to have people who are able to turn their training into products we can sell on the world market.
Lots of countries in the world have realized this. Even countries as small as Iceland or Finland have recognized it for many years and have put in place programs that encourage those things to happen. You're saying that Finland, for example, dominates the cell phone manufacturing business. I'm not sure what the payoff has been for Iceland. We all know what has happened with the economies in the Far East, starting with Japan. Now it's happening with Korea, and China is coming along. They've all recognized the principle that you need to support knowledge and innovation, and that if you do that, you can turn it into competitiveness. It's really a very simple formula.