First of all, we've served for 100 years, and I look forward to serving as an agency for the next hundred.
I would say with this recovery, when we look at it in comparison, say, to the 2008-09 recovery, there are some fundamental differences between the situation back in 2008-09 compared to what we're going through now. Obviously, this one is a public health crisis to which policy responses have had a fairly significant impact on what we're seeing. We don't see the kind of housing crisis that we saw back then, where we saw the exact opposite trends of what we're seeing now.
However, there are some parallels as well, in terms of supply chains and the impact of a particular issue in one country having an impact on another because of the integrated nature of our economies and our societies these days. Those are some of the areas where we can start to look at comparing and contrasting the uniqueness of this particular situation as opposed to in the past.
From a data perspective, our aim is always how we can provide more timely data, more granular data and more integrated data, so that we can better understand what's going on and you as decision-makers can make the right difficult choices so that we're all working together.