I think you should be active on it. The important thing is to bring that process to a satisfactory conclusion. There will always be tax evasion; there's no question about that. There will always be fraud; there will always be bank robbers. The fact is that the progress that has been made, I would say over the last five years, from what I read and in my discussions with OECD officials, is really quite remarkable. I think it's been inspired by the fact that suddenly people realize we're talking not just about money at the margins but about billions and billions of taxpayers' dollars. Some of it, of course, also plays into corruption. We have another organization we created, the financial action task force, which has basically tried to identify money laundering, which could be from the drug trade, could be from gambling, trading in humans, counterfeit goods, all sorts of illegal activities.
All of this is getting, I think, better and better, but we still have a long way to go. I think the role for Canada is to continue to be very active at the OECD and in other fora, although I have a bias towards the work at the OECD, and especially the committee supported by Jeffrey Owens, and I'll tell you why. I mentioned all the committees we have, but the committee on fiscal affairs was manned by decision-makers at the bureaucratic level, people who could actually go back and make the difference. We had William McCloskey, who was head of the CRA—he actually chaired it. We had Joe Guttentag, who was one of the most senior in the Treasury of the United States; Gabs Makhlouf, from the Treasury in the U.K.
These people were basically operating back in capitals at the decision-making level, making recommendations directly to the ministers, and to the Secretary of the Treasury in the case of the United States. In fact, you would meet them all together. Rubin and Guttentag and others would be there. These were the meetings you would have. It was the same thing in the U.K.
That's why that committee is so important. That committee is important because it will get things done. It won't just be somebody going back and making a report that gradually filters up through the bureaucracy on a particular subject.
So I lay great emphasis on the role that committee is playing and the role it has played. I think the results have been very effective.