That's a very good fundamental point. It's important for me to underscore that when we took those 2,000 export categories, the filter we used was to tell us which ones have had at least a 75% drop in exports since 2000, which is a very long term. If you add in a sunset industry that was going to go out of business for other reasons, we can't blame that on the financial crisis, and so on. That's a very fair point, and we don't make that claim.
In that, what we had though was a long period of dollar appreciation that was associated with the rising terms of trade in Canada, primarily driven by oil prices, but other resource pricing, too. As we've said before, that rise in oil prices in that period, say from $25 or $30 per barrel up to over $100 per barrel, had important income effects for Canada, and it caused underneath that a transformation of the Canadian economy, extra growth in the resource sector, a two-speed economy, lower growth in other parts of the economy. That can be stressful for certain companies, and we see some of the results of that. Then the crisis comes and the downturn, which is icing on the cake. If you're already experiencing problems, that could be the thing that puts you out. The sectors that come to mind are things like large transport trucks, locomotives—you can guess the companies probably—kraft paper, pulp, wood products for houses, wood furniture, knitted fabrics, those kinds of things.
All I'm saying is that we need another period of building to replace that, and as far as we can tell, it may be barely getting started.