Thank you.
And that would be my argument, and not only my argument, but it's actually the argument of a number of economists that you rely on for information and that the government obviously relies on for information.
I want to go to a different question.
We've seen a lot of surprisingly strong economic data in recent weeks in Canada, and I'd just like to highlight that. Canada's merchandise trade surplus in December hit the highest surplus in months and months, with strong growth in exports. Employment increased by 69,200 in January, which is the strongest in months. Canada's GDP grew by 0.4% in November, which is the largest monthly gain since March 2010. And many economists have been revising their projections up because of this strength. Indeed, we saw last Friday that trade data was strong enough that the Bank of Montreal upgraded its fourth-quarter forecast for Canada to 3% from 2.3%, as well as next year's expansion, to 2.8% from 2.7%.
Since there have been some revisions upwards, I'm wondering if you plan to revise your projections up as well.