I think that makes eminent sense.
You're right, let's stay away from Haiti, because it's perhaps the most extreme example. But in other countries, if either through a corporate social responsibility engagement or a partnership circumstance like Mr. Eaton's, there is that willingness to invest....
Everybody identifies with a piece of social infrastructure—a school, a hospital. There is a sense that hopefully we've left something that's durable—tragically, it often isn't—but there is a sense that it's a contribution that governments, public agencies, or the private sector make to a community in which often they're doing business or in a region, or so on.
But your initial comments were very interesting around building institutions—something as simple as the rule of law, which in western countries we might take for granted, or a land title system on which one can then build credit.
How can we get people to think that's as valuable a contribution—to pick up on your earlier comments—as it would be to deal with a particular social or economic or infrastructure challenge in a particular country or region of that country?