That effect is quite significant. We can see it in the numbers already this year. The slowdown in the U.S. has been under way for some time. It affected the forestry sector, first of all, because of the housing impact, but that has spread to consumer goods sectors supplying other things for homes--doors, windows, furniture, and that sort of thing. So those sectors have been labouring for about a year now.
Our most recent survey of exporter confidence was just released about a week ago, and it has been crushed in the last six months. It's gone to a level that's lower than it was in the aftermath of 9/11, when there was almost a global recession at that time. So exporters are saying their outlook for the next 12 months is quite poor. There still are a healthy number who believe their exports will be the same next year, or grow a little, but in terms of the readings, these are the worst we've seen. We expect that the world will be fairly resilient to this, that we won't have a global recession, but the U.S. is dragging everybody down to a degree, so we expect our exports overall to go down during 2008--not to grow, but to actually go down modestly.