Absolutely. One interesting thing would have been to have measured the lost opportunity costs by not rolling out the program. What have we lost by not going forward with a number of initiatives? Clearly, we don't have the instruments to do that measurement, but by not making the investments, by not kick-starting small enterprises that could get started--as Nancy says, it's nine to one in Quebec--if you use the same arithmetic with the leveraging argument, we have a lot of lost opportunities.
I should add, too, that the Nova Scotia Co-op Council had been working with groups in Nova Scotia to create a consortium for the social economy, and they had leveraging of about $30 million from different sources in the Atlantic region, had the social economy rolled out. So one could argue that had it gone forward, if you add that $30 million from other sources, there's a lost opportunity there.