If you look at Canada, whether with regard to our energy and resources or whatever Statistics Canada basket you use, most of our resource dependency is decreasing over time. It hasn't increased under the term of your government or even in the last couple of governments. What we have probably seen is more rhetoric around that. If you went out and asked Canadians how dependent they are on the oil industry, I think they've been told over and over again that it's the engine of our economy. So it's natural for them to think and buy into this idea that this is the only thing. The other part is our focus on deficits versus total government expenditures. If you look at Alberta as an example of this, we just saw Alberta government revenues shift by a projection of $900 million, but that took them from a deficit to a surplus. That's a $900 million shift on a $46 billion annual revenue, or whatever their total number is. It's a relatively small shift, but it seems large because we are focused on deficit versus surplus.
The same thing is true at the federal level. We are really interested in whether we are going to be in deficit or in surplus. Saying the price of oil is going to drive that makes it seem as though it's a much larger share of the overall economy than it actually is.