Thank you for your questions. I am going to answer quickly.
First of all, I am very familiar with the Dutch disease. We actually have a problem. We have a flexible exchange rate that essentially reacts to what is happening, since the Canadian dollar has become a type of oil currency, the way it is in Saudi Arabia. That's because of the successful increase in our exports, not only in raw materials in general, but also in oil specifically.
It is a very specific problem, but I don't think the monetary policy can really make a difference directly. If not, another possibility would be to try and control the exchange rate just to try to make us more competitive in the manufacturing sector, to the extent possible. We might be able to play with that, but other problems might also ensue.
And if we look at other countries that have had fixed exchange rates—it is not Europe's case at the moment, but it has been historically—we can see that there have been specific crises. I personally don't think this is the way to get us out of the slump the manufacturing sector is in. We should first do something about the tax side of things.