The G-7 is a little more difficult because the data is not always comparable.
I think the adoption statistic I used in my opening remarks was that Canadian businesses are investing, per worker, 60% of what the U.S. is doing. That is a gap that has maintained itself, if not increased, over the last seven or eight years. The concern is that this underinvestment is linked to productivity; that we're less productive, perhaps because we've had the benefit of a lower dollar or we've had the benefit of lower wage rates; and that perhaps we're a little more risk-averse, and therefore the companies are not investing to the same extent.
It's hard to benchmark, but we try to look at how our legislative regime compares with that of other countries and what pieces we do have to put in place. The data breach legislation, the amendments to PIPEDA, the anti-spam, the copyright--they'll all help that way.
But in terms of engaging in electronic commerce, Canadians are not doing badly for some types of services. I think our percentage for Canadians willing to engage in online banking compares well.