Again, I'm sure the industry would love to go back to the unusual peaks of 2013 and 2007 but those are anomalies. We're actually dealing with a fairly strong global oil price. It's not a global problem. It is a homemade one.
Another comment you made—you were giving an explanation for the poor economic growth Canada experienced in 2018 and the low forecasts for 2019, even more dismal—was about the U.S.-led trade war. Now I'm against all trade wars. I am a proudly ideological supporter of free trade in all circumstances, but what I find interesting is that the United States is growing almost twice as fast as Canada at 2.9% in 2018, and China is growing three and a half times as fast as Canada at 6.6% in 2018.
Given that they are our two largest trading partners, that they constitute 80% of our trade and that they are the principal participants in this so-called trade war, how can we possibly blame Canada's dismal growth on those two countries when their growth is significantly higher than ours?