Thank you.
I want to move on to Mr. Irving. Thank you for being here this morning. The gentleman from Saint John Board of Trade can chime in afterwards as well.
On the regulatory front, I often look at it as an economist and as someone who worked on Bay Street and Wall Street. I look at it as regulatory uncertainty. Mr. Irving, you pointed to it as regulatory layering. I think that was one of your comments. I'm concerned, always, about regulatory layering. Yesterday's agreement on the new trade accord with the United States, the USMCA—it kind of reminds me of a song, for some reason—I think puts to rest a lot of regulatory uncertainty on the trade side, which is great. Regulatory layering is concerning.
On the productivity side, one thing I think we need to focus on is ensuring we close the gap between productivity per hour per U.S. worker, or however you want to define it, versus Canada. I'd like to ask for your top three recommendations for how we can continue to close that productivity gap, because that does affect our standard of living. Like you, I like to be constructive and not critical when I'm meeting with folks.