That's a really good point. The Haiti example really demonstrates that in the extraordinary outpouring of generosity you've had in Canada and other countries across the world in response to that crisis.
Unfortunately, the limitation of this data is that it captures what is officially reported to the OECD as development assistance by OECD countries. This is essentially bilateral aid and support from multilateral agencies, whether its the World Bank, an international development association, or humanitarian initiatives. They don't capture what you'd describe as personal donations.
What we tried to do in the report this year is look at other sources. I can send you the relevant material. There's actually quite a lot of other sources. There's large-scale philanthropic donations, small-scale personal contributions, and a whole lot of things not captured in these numbers. If you could redo the numbers for every OECD country, capturing these private contributions and philanthropic donations, the picture would look different. Precisely what it would look like, I couldn't tell you, so I can't give you a full answer to that question.