I would describe it more as a tool kit.
If you're a Sunday hobbyist and you have only half the tools you need, you end up going over to Home Depot to get something extra to finish that job. Along the way, you collect a tool kit. It begins with an intense interest in things monetary—which is what I did all of my research work on during my student days—which was, clearly, why at that time I was preparing myself to come to the Bank of Canada for a permanent position. That chief economist experience, however, puts economics into that tool kit phase, as opposed to more of a passion or religion phase, because there's so much more going on. Then, the evolution to the EDC has given me much more of a grounding in the real business community in Canada, which gives you a whole other way to think about those issues—highly complementary—and so I find then that the tool kit feels full.