Yes, of course. Again, I don't know, even in my own country, what the experience has been, but my suspicion is that the number of requests that go out under any given TIEA in a timeframe, within a year, say, is pretty limited.
I think TIEAs are more important symbolically than they are practically. They're not going to end the tax haven problem. Let's put it that way. The countries that want to maintain tax haven processes.... Some of them actually have tax treaties beyond TIEAs. They have exchange of information provisions in tax treaties. I don't think that really gets to the heart of the matter. They have low tax rates. They attract investment from developed countries.
So I'm not against TIEAs in any way, shape, or form. I just think they're a relatively small part of the overall picture if we're talking about tax evasion and tax havens.