I certainly think that skilled labour would be an issue—training that labour and making training fluid. We listed those seven recommendations to try to strategically focus your attention on a number of areas.
An additional area that I think a number of us touched upon is the whole issue of internal trade barriers. When Mr. McTeague was talking about his questions—as well as other members of Parliament—if we visualize an increasingly liberalized world, our internal trade barriers become shackles to us to better compete in that liberalized world. Therefore, I think the whole issue of internal trade barriers as a potential dysfunction facing that liberalized world, and also internal trade barriers as a function of our competiveness, should be high on that list.
On the earlier line of questioning about a level playing field in how you treat companies and sectors, when you look at services internationally, because there's a great growth potential from the current 13%, what areas should we push in parts of the world geographically? It's not an attempt to pick winners or losers; it's an attempt to try to connect the dots much better with what we produce, who our competition is, and where those services ought to be going. So it's a matter of sharpening the trade and investment side internationally and linking it with the things we can do well and can do more of.
Those are certainly some issues.
You're pointing to the numbers.