Mr. Chair, I'm not sure I can do that in less than a minute, but what we mean is that we don't have a legislative framework right now in Canada that would permit the creation of geographic foreign trade zones in Canada. We have what some would say is a suite of programs that allow manufacturers and exporters to do certain very limited tariff-free activities. There are some restrictions under NAFTA in what can and cannot be done.
We're looking for more than that. We're looking to go beyond that. We're looking for a legislative environment that would actually allow things to be brought into Canada that would never, under tax law, be considered to have been in Canada. Manufacturers could add some value to it and then ship it off somewhere else.
The chair of the Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters Association, Dr. Fung, has a great way of showing how global the economy really is: you take one part in one part of the world, put it on a cargo airplane, land it in Canada, and do something to it, and it goes somewhere else. The final product is a multiple-steps process. We're looking for a legislative environment that allows Canada to actually have these geographic regions.