Any investment that makes it easier for firms to grow is going to add to that productivity line, and every little bit counts and adds up. Second, anything you can remove that is an impediment to growth adds to that process.
Finally, I think the most important aspect of all is to nurture the process of creation of new companies because historically it is new companies, young companies that have had the giant leaps in productivity that have made our agri-productivity statistics stronger. That process has been slow since the crisis. In the U.S., it has begun to pick up nicely. In the U.K., it has picked up nicely. We're a bit behind that process. I'm confident it will happen here, too. But the most important phase is where productivity is fostered.
Policies that favour young companies and allow them to grow faster—and there's a wide menu of those—I think, are the main things we should focus on.