Yes, that's something we looked at ourselves a few years ago. We looked at how private sector corporations or those that get contracts to deliver on military procurement and military spending in general were fulfilling their obligations when it comes to the benefits for the country.
We found something quite strange. For example, if these corporations invest in research and development, they get multiple credits. Instead of being one-for-one, one dollar of credit per one dollar of expenditure, they can get up to nine times the credit.
You would think that a private sector corporation investing in research and development in the country would try to minimize its own expenditures and invest in R and D to get maximum bang for their buck, but very few do that. They instead go for the one-for-one, and to meet their obligation, they invest in or spend on normal procurement items that are not that structurally beneficial for the Canadian economy. It suggests that the ITB program, as we call it, is not really delivering as much impact as one would expect for the country in terms of research and development.
When corporations get contracts, by and large, they do meet the requirements, but they do it on items that are not as beneficial as they could be.