This is one of my pet pieces.
First and foremost, Canada by necessity does collaborate quite extensively internationally, at least at the academic level. It's partly because of the size of our country. It's natural recognizing that for most of that knowledge—and I think Dan made reference to it earlier on—we have 0.5% of the population in the world. We have 4% of the knowledge that is produced. In 2013, for the first time, more than 50% of published journals in natural sciences and engineering had a co-author from someone outside Canada. What's also interesting, however, is that the percentage with the United States, which has been our traditional collaborator, has dropped. That's saying that all of a sudden there's an explosion of new knowledge that's coming from places we never thought of before. It's primarily but not only from Asia. We're seeing a rapid rise, particularly with China and South Korea, of investments in cutting-edge research and development. We definitely need to be connected in a very serious way if we want to stay on that track.