I don't know. I think this goes back to a question that Ms. Hughes raised about not doing business or trading with a country because it's not meeting your standards in taxation. The OECD used to be called the rich man's club when I joined it, which was a bit of an exaggeration, since Turkey had been a member from the outset in 1960, and of course we had other countries coming on.
The OECD's reach has extended enormously in the last 10 to 15 years. When I was there, there used to be 28 countries, then I received Poland and Korea and Slovakia, I guess; that meant three, 27 up to 30. Now more have been added. But apart from the ones that were added, this global forum that I expect Jeffrey Owens spoke about, which we created in 2000, something like 95 countries are involved in this global forum. So we're talking now about the bulk of the world's GDP that's represented at the forum.
Those countries are the ones that are taking on these understandings, these obligations, these agreements, and these tax information exchange agreements. The impression he might have left is it was a small club initially that was mostly trading among themselves. Among the OECD members they were about 60% or 70% of GDP, but then of course that all changed with China, India, and others coming on. Now, of course, it's a much broader base, and that means many more countries--