Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you both for being here.
I want to have a bottom-line approach. What impact do you really have? On one hand, I was impressed by the positive comments from the Canadian Federation of Independent Business on your website. I fully accept that it's a good website.
If you're here to help small businesses get procurements, and you've been operating for about five years, then I would think it doesn't help us very much to say that you've assisted 140,000 individuals and suppliers, because that doesn't tell us whether the assistance did anything, at the end of the day.
I would be interested in knowing whether, of all the procurements by the Government of Canada, the percentage obtained by small business has been going up or down since you started business. I would think that might be an actual target. If you want to help small business, and you're successful, one would expect over time that small businesses would get a rising share of the contracts. Another way of looking at it, which is similar, is to ask what proportion of the contracts, the procurements, small businesses get--let's say it's 30%, just to throw out a number--and what percentage of jobs or sales are accounted for by small businesses--let's say it's 50%. You'd want that 30% to 50% gap to get smaller over time. That way, one would have a better idea as to whether your program has in fact helped small businesses get more procurement business. Do you have any information of that kind?