Right. That was actually my second point on business investment.
For a good number of years, we have had our business investment relying heavily on investment in the commodity space. That has served us well in terms of generating growth, but we have seen a lack of investment in information and communication technologies.
It was quite stunning when the pandemic hit and you looked at how the U.S. responded. All of a sudden, people needed to work from home. Businesses had to invest massively in their capabilities on that front, and you have seen that pick up in the information and communication technology investment. We haven't seen that quite to the same extent here in Canada.
Moreover, we're in a phase, obviously, with the aging of the population, where businesses need to gain resilience against that demographic shift. One of those ways is automation. We are not seeing the same level of dynamism on this front in Canada as we are seeing in the U.S. That's a key factor that will allow companies in Canada not just to stay alive but to compete, because, all of a sudden, if you have companies in the U.S. that are fully automated and are able to produce at much cheaper costs, they are going to come after our market share. That's also an issue that we haven't seen much traction on in Canada, and that is a worry for us.