The comparisons are somewhat difficult, because there are different programs, et cetera. Our total budget, if you include the Canada research chairs, the networks of centres of excellence, and indirect costs, is approaching now $900 million. Per capita, the United States is still about fourfold beyond Canada in per capita terms. But also take into account that our mandate is much broader than that of the equivalent agency, the National Institutes of Health.
So on the one hand, we still have a long way to go; on the other hand, we've come a long way. Our budget has increased, I think quite remarkably, over the last seven years since CIHR was first launched. Certainly I am personally very grateful for that. I think the research community is.
So I think we're on the right trajectory. We have to stay the course; that would be my advice. We are building on excellence. I think the Council of Canadian Academies noted that health sciences broadly is an area of exceptional strength in this country. So we are building on strength, and I think we are building on what matters to Canadians, which is their health and their health care system.