There are a number of aspects to your question. As for the excess cash currently held by companies, it seems to me, as my colleague said earlier, that the situation is in part temporary. It arises because of a huge amount of uncertainty, especially in Europe, where the banking system is undergoing the same kind of stress that we in North America went through three years ago. So businesses are being extremely careful, but it is temporary. Once this acute phase of the European financial crisis subsides—and I think that will happen in the next few months—businesses will be a little more ready to invest.
How to get the manufacturing sector back? That is complicated. It is a global phenomenon that has been happening for a long time. In Canada, we were somewhat sheltered from it for a number of years because our currency was too low for too long. That is an old argument. So it overshadowed the major trends a little, and the adjustment happened very quickly in recent years. The government could take steps to support the manufacturing sector, of course, but you always have to bear in mind that we are part of the global economy. There are things that can be done and other things that the government does not have the luxury of doing. It is certainly a major issue that deserves debate.