If I understand your question correctly, you are asking if Canadian aid is focused on where it gets the most results and impact. From a policy perspective, I think, yes, there's pretty much very little difference between successive Canadian governments in terms of how international development is done. That's mostly because there's a lot of international agreement and global agreements by experts, by practitioners and by people in the private sector on aid and the best use of aid.
I think the major issue isn't whether the aid is getting results. It is. The question is whether the results can be scaled up even more. What vehicles do you have to do that? I would argue that the landscape of development finance is changing quickly. Canada's foreign policy and Canada's international development assistance programs don't have the complete set of tools to pay for the kinds of markets we are targeting. The results are there, but there is a lot more. With the right vehicles, you could definitely scale these results four or five times, especially when it comes to the issue of making blended finance available for markets like Africa or this place where I am right now.