Thank you for explaining that.
Since our government took office in 2006, we've negotiated a record number of free trade agreements. I think we now have them with 43 different countries, and we had only five countries with these agreements in place when we came into office.
The most notable ones were the last two, which are with the European Union and with South Korea. They are both quite notable in the sense that the one with South Korea is the first free trade agreement with a country in the Asia-Pacific, and the one with Europe is notable because of its size and scope, so many countries involved, and such significant measures that are going to be taking place.
Our own analysts have calculated perhaps as many as 80,000 jobs will be created as a result of the European free trade agreement, and that could translate into $1,000 per Canadian family.
How effective are free trade agreements at creating jobs and growing the economy, and how will Canada benefit in the years ahead from these new free trade agreements as Canada has with the free trade agreement with the United States and NAFTA that was negotiated by a previous Conservative government in the 1980s?