Yes. Absolutely. I established a concept called the indigenomics economic mix, 12 levers to support the economic design of the indigenous economy. Some of those levers include entrepreneurship, equity, capital, clean energy, procurement and trade, to begin to look at those levers of indigenous economic design and invest into those structures, moving outside of the emphasis on particularly programs and services.
If we look at the existing budget, when we reflect back on the economic...the fiscal equation doesn't make sense. We see 2% engaged within economic development dollars that reach indigenous communities. To balance that, of course we can see that lack of balance within the socio-economic gap. To bring focus means essentially there's an overemphasis on the social and an underemphasis on the economic. To look at investing into structures, investing into systems and tools, and convening economic space particularly for indigenous-led leadership—that's what we're looking at in an environment of the implementation of UNDRIP. It's about indigenous-led economic institutions that support and bring a specific narrative of indigenous economic strength, moving away from the Indian Act itself, and looking at indigenous economic activity as participation within the larger GDP itself.