Again, it's a mixed picture. If you go to the most recent OECD development assistance committee review of G-7 countries, it does cite a number of countries that are falling short of their Gleneagles commitments. Those are 2005 commitments. Canada isn't one of those countries, but Germany, France, and Japan are all cited as falling some way short of commitments in terms of program data in the pipeline now.
Inevitably, that's going to have knock-on effects for education. If the envelope is shrinking, you can't protect every sector within the envelope and there is a real danger that it will have consequences for education. That's why I think the summit is an opportunity to really draw a line in the sand and say, “We are this one generation of primary school kids away; let's set a new course.”