Speaking to Ms. Nash's question, it's significant from a fiscal perspective, when coupled with lower GDP inflation. But in terms of the dynamics of Canadian growth, what's important, if one wants to look at the positives—and we should look at the positives sometimes as well as the negatives—is, as I said, that the quality of U.S. growth has picked up. That is important. We haven't fully filtered that in or fully taken it into account in our export forecast for Canada. We have negative judgment, so to speak, in our exports forecast for Canada.
The second thing is that we are starting a rotation of demand that we have expected for some time in Canada. Housing is less important; consumption debt—finance consumption—is less important; and investment and exports ultimately are going to be more important.