As we said earlier, developing intellectual property is extremely important, given the globalization of the industry. In that context, our companies have to send lower value-added work abroad. Sometimes, we have to make sacrifices and concessions to keep the development of intellectual property in research here. That means a lot of jobs for five, six or seven years. One of our companies has done a lot of work on the Boeing Airbus program, and about 60 engineers worked for seven years to develop the intellectual property. Those are high-paying jobs. At one point, there was a reference to IP strategies and that is what this is.
Sometimes, we have to make concessions and send less strategic intellectual property abroad, because something else is already being developed and our industry will be able to manufacture a product elsewhere at a lower cost. That enables businesses to be far more competitive. But, if it is not allowed, that can become a problem in terms of the support we receive from SADI or other sources.