The central bankers of the world meet every six or eight weeks at the Bank for International Settlements in Switzerland. Those meetings include Mexico and the United States. We have an almost continuous dialogue about these kinds of issues. In addition, those people meet together with the finance ministers at the G-20 or G-7 meetings a little less regularly.
There's a pretty strong consensus around the things you mention. I argued in a speech a couple weeks ago that much of the world's progress over the last 150 years for Canada, in terms of growth and prosperity, have been in periods that you could characterize as open: open to trade, capital, and immigration. All of the periods in which we were not open were very distressed periods here in Canada. It's an easy correlation to see.
The last time we were closed was just prior to Confederation. Confederation and the free trade agreement implied in it was a response to the closing of international markets—any port in a storm.
In the end, I think there is a strong consensus around these things. I'm hopeful that, as we have dialogue and understanding grows, many of these things that we hold dear are preserved.