Well, I have a hard time seeing it, unless it's just to be part of the world's big six international development financing institutions. We are certainly a major member and contributor to the World Bank. We're part of the Inter-American Development Bank, and the other four.
It tends to be an obligation that countries are supposed to assume, to buttress their general approach to international development to participate in the international development banks. I'm not sure that's going to get the citizens out giving us cheers in the main squares of Asian countries. However, it does show that we're meeting our assumed obligations and so-called punching above our weight by being in with the rest of the world, and it virtually is the rest of the world. It's 60, and apparently there are 22 applicants waiting in the wings to join to become minority shareholders.