I appreciate the question, sir. Thank you.
Fundamentally, there are two overarching structures: WE Charity and ME to WE Social Enterprises. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, as per CRA and the Income Tax Act, section 149 to be precise, charities cannot operate like businesses to solve social issues. They cannot literally operate a business structure. It's because of this unfortunate reality of the CRA structure in Canada that things like Grameen Bank, an extraordinary social enterprise that won the Nobel Peace Prize for microcredit, lifting people out of poverty, frankly, never could have been created in Canada. Social enterprise is a growing and powerful force to better the world.
So WE had to engage the best lawyers and accountants and systems to build what was a labyrinth to adhere to the proper Canadian laws and regulations, and it's a shame because we get called by so many people who are seeking how they can do it themselves in this way. So these fundamental structures exist to fulfill the social mission mandate. Each country you listed adheres to its respective country laws. Canada's has its own incorporation, the U.S., the U.K. In fact, other countries in the developing world have their own incorporation. Fundamentally, it is WE Charity and WE to ME Social Enterprises.