I think there are a couple of uses of it. The reason we put it in is to compare it to page 10, which is the American outlook, which is the slowest recovery in the United States since the Great Depression. If you could see, for example, their build-up for this, it's not in the report.... For example, consumption in the United States is very weak relative to previous recoveries. The reason we go back to the 1930s for the U.S. and only back to 1961 for Canada is a question of data. Statistics Canada didn't start to have the quarterly data, so you can't reconstruct this chart.
I think it's because we thought that it was important, first for comparison, but then secondly, to give some context to what is a recovery. We get as many people telling us that they think the recovery is going to be too fast as people who tell us that they think it's going to be too slow. Certainly the recovery over our horizon, in the next two years, will not be as strong relative to previous ones. It's an important element relative to the amount of excess capacity slack we have in the economy, and therefore how much time it takes to use that up, and therefore what the pressures are on inflation and where our policy is.