That's a bit of a tricky question, given my position as the independent researcher for the reporting mechanism that is part of the OGP. The independent reporting mechanism tries not to rank countries in terms of who is and who is not doing the best.
You can see some reports out there. There is one released in February of 2013 by Capgemini that you might want to look at. I can provide a link to the committee, if you're interested. It did that kind of comparative ranking. It ranked Canada as a trendsetter in the area of open data, but a trendsetter behind the U.K. and behind the U.S.
Their metrics, which I haven't had time to critically evaluate, put us behind those two countries because of such things as the lack of diversity or breadth in the data sets that are out there—that goes back to the point I made earlier about the dominance of geospatial data—and also the lack of a good forum for engagement and lack of a good mechanism for ongoing, sustained engagements. Those two things together set us back a little bit.