I think comparable numbers would apply to NSERC, which I happen to be more familiar with.
There have been significant increases, but they are virtually all targeted research. Our point is that it's essential. Economists everywhere agree that for a country to be successful in the world these days it has to have balanced support for both basic research, which ultimately gives rise to the biggest impact, and targeted research. I think the big concern is that we're tending to move away from that. We were not asking for a huge amount of money. Still, the signal that would be sent by an increase at the basic end would be extremely important.