You want to see research happening in Canada, find applications in Canada, and contribute to jobs and growth in Canada, but part of being part of an international dialogue on research and innovation involves those ideas and those people moving back and forth. We need to be, I would perhaps suggest, in that community and aware of those developments and bringing them back to Canada as much as they come out, in the way Eliot was referring to.
If you look at the suite of programs we use to support research in Canada, like for instance the granting councils, they make investments not only in research, but also in that translation of research out into the community, and Graham's organization is also a good example of that. They try to line up a user with a researcher to try to get that connectivity to happen.
In the case of NSERC, which has a budget of about $860 million a year, it spends about $160 million of that on trying to make those networks or collaborations happen, to have that stickiness occur that you're looking at. But you don't necessarily want to go too far down that road, because we only produce, as Eliot put so well, 4% of the world's ideas. We need to be part of that dialogue and be part of that international community so that we are excelling in that. It's attractive to put the question as you have, but there are some advantages to being open as well.