A key message that I also wanted to bring is about balance. Not only has CIDA cut its funding, but it's also shifted increasingly away from providing support to governments, bilateral funding, and civil society organizations, and increasingly towards multilaterals. We need support for multilateral initiatives like the ones Ms. Brown talked about, but I think it's a question of balance. When you're trying to get governments to stand on their own feet, taking away money from governments to try to do that isn't helpful. You want to be focusing on things like domestic resource mobilization. The IMF, itself, has said that Mali, for example, should increase the royalties that it should get from natural resource revenue.
In terms of CSR, I think CSR is an obligation of private companies. As I said, for the most part it comes from within their own corporate interests and it's guided by their corporate interests. Where CIDA maybe has a role to play is where it can tap into the core business model of a private-sector organization and partner it with other organizations. But when it's not core, it's not going to work.