Actually, productivity innovation is a decades-old problem. I have had, as you would put it, the unfortunate experience of reading all these reports—C.D. Howe, Red Wilson, Jenkins, Deloitte Touche. I've read them back to the 1960s, and in some cases you would think they were written this summer. Now, I'm not saying that's a good thing. What I'm saying is that improving a country's productivity is a difficult thing and it's hard to measure. You can't make a change this year and then expect to see the change next year. The fact is we have seen some increase in productivity measurements, but in my view, it is for a quarter and doesn't necessarily in itself signify the trend that we want.
This comes right back to exactly why in 2007 we set up our science and technology strategy. This is exactly why we look to encourage businesses to partner with our academic communities so that we can move that knowledge, and there is a lot of that knowledge, down into our factories.