Honestly, it's going to sound as if I'm trying to avoid your question, but I'm not.
It is so hard to do what we're proposing and what the country needs to do to increase its growth rate. I'll speak personally about this. This is not a one or two or three silver bullet issue; this is a lot of hard blocking and tackling on a variety of different fronts.
You've seen, in both the work that we did and was released in the fall and the work we've done more recently, the topic headings reflect the things that we think are most important.
Canada has an infrastructure problem and an infrastructure financing problem because it cannot all be done on government balance sheets. That's the way it used to be done. It doesn't work anymore.
You make a reference to pension capital. Wearing my Caisse de dépôt hat, we invest in infrastructure around the world. Big pools of capital can be brought into Canada to build infrastructure. We think foreign investment in Canada is really important.
Given your comments about the labour force. We think immigration into Canada is really important to augment the labour force, which is a critical contributor to economic growth. Many people, I think, misunderstand the issue of immigration. Immigration doesn't take people's jobs away; it creates jobs.
Ilse spent her life working around issues of innovation. That's critical.
The things that we've talked about more recently—skills, sectors, stuff like that, all of those things—need to be addressed. What's required here is a comprehensive effort to address all of these issues.