Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Welcome to our witnesses this afternoon. Again, this is another intriguing chapter in our science and technology study.
Mr. Corbett, you made some...much like Mr. Arthur, who received your comments as a bit of an indictment of Canada's program around science and technology, when in fact what we've seen is probably one of the more robust, if not the most robust investment in science and technology that this country has seen in the last several years. And that's frankly been built on significantly in the last three budgets of this government--some $2.4 billion added to that commitment, and a new strategy, called mobilizing science and technology, part of Advantage Canada's plan. It aligns entirely with our economic policy, Advantage Canada. So I was rather surprised by your concluding paragraph, paragraph 4, where you talk about aligning our S and T strategy with our economic policy. In fact, that's exactly what the government of the day has done.
I take issue with the premise of your remarks today, particularly when we've heard from earlier witnesses and data that show that Canada right now is behind OECD countries in terms of the representation of business and private sector investment. Don't you think that part of the science and technology strategy should be to engage more of that private sector and to continue to do the good things we're doing on our own in-house research, on the good work that NRC and other like companies are doing, but at the same time, to get the strategy to enable that additional pool of research that frankly other countries are doing much better at than we are. In our competing countries, 68% of R and D is from the private sector, whereas Canada is over-represented right now on the government side. What you're telling us is almost exactly the opposite to what we're seeing in the way the data are presented.