I want to thank each and every one of you for being here this morning.
As one who has spent twice as many years in academia as in politics, I'd like to focus first on our academic guests.
I certainly have long believed that funding of research and innovation is crucial, not only for its own sake but for economic reasons, particularly in our current circumstances, when many of the jobs are not going to come back and we have to create the new jobs for tomorrow.
I might say in passing that I think this is in contrast with the government's attitude, which is actually to cut funding for granting councils. I think that is a somewhat Neanderthal attitude.
First I would like to ask a question to Madam Fortier.
Ms. Fortier, you stressed the importance of agility, not just excellence, but also agility.
I wonder if you could expand on how your agency or research in general in Canada can be more agile. I think that in Canada, being much smaller than the U.S., we have certain disadvantages, but maybe we could capitalize on our smallness by being more agile.
Could you expand on that a little bit?