The data you give us are correct. Despite a lot of concern about Canada's competitiveness and its ability to attract investment, in 2018 there was about a 5% increase in inbound FDI, which is quite healthy. It's true that this increase was not in the energy sector, but of course, I could say the same thing about domestic investment. Domestic investment was being pared here in Canada in that sector.
The investment we are seeing is in what we would call more growth sectors. That's not to say that the energy sector won't attract investment, because it will and it still is, but it's lower than it was before. Its growth is perhaps constrained by transportation constraints, but slack makes more of an organic growth picture for the oil sector, until there is a pipeline, let's say, in which case we might then see a jump in activity.
In other sectors, I would say that the biggest investment area is intellectual property or softer forms of capital. If we look across, the strongest export sector now, in growth terms, is IT services. The strongest labour market and the strongest employment gains are in IT services. That's just for starters. The IT economy appears to be growing around 7% or 8% per year, attracting a lot of investment. Indeed, much of the investment is not even captured. If you just buy services on the cloud, you don't have to invest.
There are, then, some big transformations happening that make it hard to read, but we think that for investment overall, according to our survey of 100 firms in the BOS, everybody's ready to invest. We're hopeful, then, that the first quarter, when we get those data, shows it.