As I mentioned, our view in most domestic policies that relate to an international negotiation is that you want to have at least the same treatment for foreign companies as for Canadian companies abroad. If we don't have that, why would another country sit down with us? What would be in it for them? That would be my first statement about that.
I would like to go back to the point about no other sources of supply, because there's great potential in manufacturing right now with new innovations, with new machinery, with new ways to set up your plants. You can actually repatriate some of the work from developing countries. You're seeing that not only in the U.S but in Canada as well.
One of our members in Montreal, Mega Bloks, which makes toys, has actually invested $30 million in its plant. So it has been able to repatriate two lines of production from China, because labour costs are also going up in China.
The argument that there are no other sources of supply doesn't mean there couldn't be another source of supply in Canada, if we could get the right tax treatment of capital expenditures and stuff like that. I want to be careful with that. What's in China now is not going to be in China for 2,000 years. With the right machinery and with the right people, we might actually repatriate some of it in Canada. I think there's potential there we need to keep in mind as well.