Absolutely. All I mentioned were the committee-based reports. I didn't mention the fact that the government itself launched a full digital economy consultation with the public and got large numbers of responses from the business community, the public, NGOs, and others back in 2010.
Of course, the Office of the Privacy Commission has launched studies on these issues. The CRTC has held hearings. I really don't think we're talking about a lack of data right now. In fact, we're practically the last major economy that hasn't set out a clearly defined digital economy strategy.
What that means is that on issue after issue after issue, years go by and you start seeing the consequences. Let's take, for example, the wireless sector where, without a broad-based digital economy strategy, we're now facing real concerns with respect to the level of competitiveness. The new entrants that came into the marketplace are now being bought up. We've got a forthcoming spectrum auction with real questions about how all of that fits into the broader picture.
Unless you're creating some sort of clear vision about where it is you want to go and ensure that your policies are there so there's regulatory certainty for business and so that we've got clear initiatives leading us to a particular goal, you're going to end up floundering or, as we're hearing, even worse, declining relative to many of our competitor, peer countries.