Yes. There are different ways to make our country more productive, of course, such as providing help to the manufacturing sector, as I said earlier, and investment credits, for instance, as I've said, for research and development, not only within corporations, but across the country through the university sector, for instance, as well as worker training.
There are some issues about worker training and the renewal of the workforce, although we did capture the issue about the red seal program and mobility between provinces, which I don't think is an issue. But we can go beyond this. Corporations benefit from the kind of infrastructure they have around them, so a bridge that is falling apart is not good, but having enough workers who have the skills and education needed in order to provide productive work is also needed.
There are other things we can do. For instance, in social infrastructure we are facing an aging workforce, and we would like to see more Canadians working. We would like to see more women and more aboriginals working. There are programs such as child care that we can put in place to allow more women to go back to work, to improve labour force participation, and to make sure that companies have workers when they need them.
So it's beyond helping corporations. There are things we can do in terms of public infrastructure that help us make--