Thank you very much for the question.
I think it's a combination of things, including the debt reduction, the tax relief, being open for business, having the Advantage Canada plan that looks at investments in science and technology, and our infrastructure investments would fall under that category as well.
When you look at debt, for instance, as a percentage of GDP, we are under 30% right now. Even with all of the deficits that are required to help stabilize our economy, our debt-to-GDP ratio goes maybe a couple of points, maximum, above 30% for a period of time and then it starts to decline, as it has been declining over the last few years.
Just by way of comparison, even before today's announcement by the Treasury Secretary in the United States, the American debt-to-GDP ratio was projected to be 55% of GDP. We're around 28%, 29% of GDP.
Clearly we're in a better position. It's that kind of management that allows us, when we have to inject liquidity into the system, to not only have the ability to do so but to then bounce back fiscally more quickly than most countries. That's just one example, but I think it's a very germane one.