Thank you very much for the question.
From an investor perspective, it's very difficult to drill down and deal with individual companies, individual situations, when you hold a company in your common stock portfolio and own a very small fraction of that individual company. It becomes very difficult for investors to engage substantially and individually with many companies in their portfolios.
It becomes very important for investors to see international standards such as the ILO fundamental rights and principles at work, the core labour standards widely acknowledged and supported.
I think, efforts by the Canadian government to support Bangladesh, recognizing and implementing core labour standards, would be a very positive move from an investor perspective because it deals with systemic problems. Risk associated with Bangladesh is very hard to manage on a portfolio basis because individual companies, members of the Retail Council, will have sourcing from many different countries.
A broad, systemic approach to this is very helpful for investors. We also believe that international agreements to which Canada is a party, such as the fundamental rights of the ILO, are one of the bedrock standards for good, responsible investment.