Well, it's a pretty long list, actually, unfortunately. I would draw your attention to chart 19 on page 21. In that chart, the relevant line is unit labour costs in Canada and the United States. “Unit labour costs, Canada (in US$)” is the green line going up, and the blue line is “Unit labour costs, United States (in US$)”. You see the gap that opens up.
That is a product of the exchange rate, partially, but it is also the product of the fact that unit labour costs in the United States have been falling. They've been falling because productivity growth has been so high relative to wage growth. They've continued to rise in Canada despite large increases in spare capacity, and that's a product of flat to negative productivity in Canada.
So I'm afraid that vis-à-vis our largest trading partner the story is not good, and there is a longer list, not quite as impressive relative to Canada, of those that have performed on productivity.