I'd like to add that that depends on the type of assistance the program would provide. If it's a tax refund and we don't make a cent, we'll be in the hole. That doesn't help. It has to be a direct refund from the government to business; otherwise that wouldn't be much of a gift. We would invest, and as we wouldn't make any money, there wouldn't be a tax refund. So everything depends on the way it's written in the program. It quite often varies from one department to the next.
However, I think that research is essential, particularly since some believe that processing is a matter of spontaneity. It often takes lengthy studies on markets, the product and a product's resistance. When you listen to some politicians talk about secondary and tertiary processing, you'd think it simply springs into being and in the world the next morning. Sometimes it takes 10 years to put a product onto the market, as you know.