I can address that question.
As I mentioned in my opening comments, I agree that the treaties are largely non-controversial. They do a lot of good stuff, as Professor Rosenbloom also mentioned. I didn't mean to suggest that the Department of Finance had rushed these particular negotiations. They're certainly consistent with the Department of Finance's traditional treaty policy, and so there are no real radical changes.
I was just going to highlight this very recent trend towards automatic information exchange and how we're seeing some large financial centres—Hong Kong, Switzerland, and Luxembourg—pushing back. They don't like this regime through which we're moving toward greater global transparency. Perhaps they wouldn't have signed the treaty, as I think Mr. Castonguay suggested, without these particular amendments, so they're mainly a good thing.
But, as other witnesses have mentioned, they probably don't go far enough.