We produce an annual report card on how Canada performs, and innovation is one of the things we measure as part of that. I don't know the exact number, but generally we don't rank very well by most measures. It's a quantitative-based thing, looking at things like patents and the number of people who are graduating with PhDs, these sorts of things.
Basically, our analysis suggests that, first of all, we need to make sure we have adequate training in place in terms of getting the personnel and the skills we need to have innovation take place here. That's not just science-related degrees, it's also in terms of our MBAs, our business training to ensure we have the skills necessary to innovate and go forward.
On the other side of the equation are some of the things Jayson was talking about in terms of ensuring adequate venture capital, ensuring adequate financing for new ideas, so we're able to commercialize the ideas we come up with in our universities and other institutions and turn them into commercial products that can be sold both domestically and globally.