They understand that, and that would be true working in any country. I'm not talking about working in Canada, but Canadian companies working in other countries.
This is why I go back to the importance of having the right public policies in place, and the right public policies are not having zero taxes and zero royalties on these extractive resource projects; that's the wrong policy. In fact, it's important that the government get its share of the revenues, and of course with that comes a lot of potential community development if the government handles the money right, as opposed to other things that might happen, which are less happy, let's say, for a country. That's one example.
The regulatory side is also critical, because you can also set up a more transparent system where it's very clear when you do have something that goes wrong and those who are responsible for it have to pay a penalty for their actions, but also the regulatory system can encourage better behaviour by the various actors, the companies that operate in a jurisdiction.
This is the sort of thing we already do in Canada and many industrialized countries, and I think it's very important that developing countries have those kinds of institutions in place as well. The difficulty, of course, is whether they put them in place and how they handle it themselves and the transparency they will put in place. So I think they do have a significant responsibility in doing that, but where we can help is where those countries are willing to try to improve their own public policy capacity, that we try to help along with that, including....
I have a friend who's worked in Pakistan, and he feels that building up think tanks in Pakistan is a good idea because that puts some pressure on the government itself. It goes back to the point of view of transparency in terms of having some third-party evaluation of what a government is doing. I'm not sure how much success he's had yet in Pakistan, but I think that's the sort of concept of public policy capacity that's really important.