It seems to me that there is a lot of information at the grassroots level that never gets to the top level in corporations. Most people who are in corporate responsibility or international development work are off to the side in corporations and relatively junior. Those people have to be positioned with the CEOs. That's why, if the government provided the opportunity to get the CEOs together on some of the issues that you just presented and asked how could we do this better, it seems to me that the CEOs would then reach down through their own organizations, put the people around them and ask, “How can we do this better?” So that's recognition by the local governments in terms of what is and is not being done.
In terms of schools, if someone provides books or computers to a school, but there are no teachers to teach the students, or if someone provides laptop computers but there is nothing to charge the batteries with, or if someone provides water but there is no one to fix the water well, then at the end of the day the money goes in, but it's not sustainable. The whole issue is sustainable corporate social responsibility, not just one-way giving so that then when the companies leave nothing happens.