Yes. You're speaking to the distinction that I was making earlier between the public goods that aid is ideally suited to help create and finance, and the private goods or other market-driven activities that private capital is more ideally suited to finance. Building legal institutions, helping to reinforce the rule of law, building regulatory agencies on finance, and ensuring that regulation in individual sectors is provided in a way that's even-handed are all the things that ODA is ideally suited to provide to create the environment in which private capital flows will be more likely to come in.
These 40 or 50 countries I'm mentioning do receive aid dollars in decent numbers, not as much as they probably should and in proportion probably too little compared with the very large emerging markets that still receive a disproportionate amount of international aid. These 40 or 50 countries receive almost no private capital aside from investment in their resource sector, and that's the flow that I'm hoping a Canadian DFI would help stimulate.