I think we have to be very focused, because this is a competitive world. It's a global economy now; people and capital can move. To keep the best and brightest in Canada and to attract skilled workers in Canada, we need to have intelligent spending, quite frankly, which means we have to spend on infrastructure, because it has a direct economic impact, and we need to spend on post-secondary education—including research and development—where our innovation will come from. Those will drive productivity increases in Canada.
We need to be reasonable on the business side also, in terms of capital cost allowances and those types of issues, so that we'll see more investment in modern technology, which will also increase productivity.
Productivity isn't about people working harder. Productivity is about more efficiencies in businesses, so that with the same amount of effort people can produce more in a given period of time.
It's like General Motors in Oshawa. There aren't more people, but there are more cars and they're of better quality because of technological advances—plus good workers.