First, just for precision, it's business expenditures in research and development. It's very focused on research and development projects and not investment in capital. For example, it's not capital adoption but rather research and development, which can include technological adaptation. The corporation could support a known off-the-shelf technology to be applied in a new way, but it has to be creating new knowledge, new products, new processes and new services.
And then, you're right; currently, for example, the industrial research assistance program is an SME program. The CIC will not just focus on SMEs. In fact, one of the things we learned is that bridging between the large Canadian industrials and the SMEs can be a really powerful way in which we promote research and development and expenditures on that. There is no limitation to just supporting SMEs, but there's an understanding that there's value in bringing those two groups together, the small and the large corporations, especially with respect to procurement.