My next question is for Mr. Brakel of the Chamber of Commerce. I was pleased, just as my colleague Mr. Caron indicated, at just how much we're in agreement with many of the recommendations you've made today regarding investment in infrastructure and the need for better labour information because, as the TD recognizes and you recognize, the Government of Canada just isn't doing the job.
Innovation was the thing that caught my eye, and I want to just ask you about a recommendation that I had heard was coming in your materials but that may not have been as clear. As you may know, there's a conference with university presidents. AUCC is here in Ottawa meeting with Israeli innovators. One of the ideas that have been bandied about, which I'd like your reaction to, is the notion that paid interns and co-op students who are, let's say, at universities go to work in a small business for a period of three months or so and bring any insights that modern research has to contribute to that small business. But there's a gap and sometimes people hesitate to spend the money on bringing these interns in. So the suggestion was made that there be either a subsidy or a tax credit of perhaps $1,000 a month for the three months that a student would be there in order to provide that kind of expertise to the small business, which might otherwise hesitate, as well as provide some jobs for people trying to enter the workforce. Do you have any reaction to that idea?