Okay, let me start off on that exact point.
The U.S. current account deficit is in the order of 6% to 7% of U.S. GDP. Of course, that's a situation each year. So with each year of deficit, the U.S. is adding to its level of indebtedness to the rest of the world, and that level of indebtedness is now substantially larger than it was 10 years ago.
Fundamentally, what that current account deficit in the United States is telling you is that the U.S. economy is consuming more than they're producing. They're importing a lot of goods and services, and to finance that they're drawing on savings from the rest of the world.
A large part of those savings are coming from Asia. We've talked publicly, and we've certainly talked privately, about this situation. A good part of that surplus in Asia you see in China, but not exclusively in China. This is really a story for most of Asia, in fact. Japan continues to run a large current account surplus as well. More recently, with the increase in energy prices, you're seeing a run-up in current account surpluses of the oil-exporting countries.
This is a complicated story. Fundamentally, to rebalance these imbalances, as we call them, this current account deficit in the United States, in an orderly fashion is going to take two or three things coming together, and we're seeing signs that this is in fact happening.
First of all, you need savings in the United States to rise to help reduce that level of consumption and therefore bring down their current account deficit. But you also need to see, at the same time, demand elsewhere in the world, particularly domestic demand, beginning to pick up. We are seeing clear signs of that in Japan. There's reason to believe some of that is happening in China as well.
The third element that we deem to be important here is this issue of exchange rates and the importance of having more flexibility in those, because movements in exchange rates--we call it relative price movements--help to bring about this change in behaviour that I've just been talking about.
So this is a very important issue for Canada. We are a small, open economy. How these imbalances get resolved will be critical for us, and we've been talking about it quite openly as well in the international forum that we meet in.