Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I have a couple of questions. The first is, can all of your organizations vouch that the GST reduction actually went back to consumers, that you didn't inflate your prices internally to make up the difference for it? When there was a reduction in Atlantic Canada of taxation, there was a study done that showed there was no real net benefit to the consumers, so I want to make sure it has happened.
I'm going to ask my second question, because it's more important than the first, which is just one I get on a regular basis.
To bring it back to the study, I'm not really hearing anything from the energy industry here about how they can help move the manufacturing industry forward, in a larger perspective, or make energy part of a competitive advantage. When I look at where we're going in manufacturing, I guess we have to decide as a country whether we're going to be in or out of it. One of the assets we have as a net exporter of all kinds of energy is that it's the number one thing companies often look at: do you have stable energy and do you have low prices?
It gets to whether we have a dual market economy, where you have this as an attractive incentive for manufacturing plants. I look at, as an example where I come from, the auto industry. We're getting hammered by subsidies from the U.S. and Mexico and other places. Why is it that we don't use the natural advantages we have to bolster our manufacturing industry? I know we have trade agreements that are prohibitive of this, but where, in a larger picture, do you think your organizations can make a big difference for manufacturing in our country, as opposed to somewhere else?