We live in a global community. There are a multitude of branch plant businesses in Canada. There are also some fairly large businesses in Canada that have branch planted out to the rest of that global community. The decision-making that a large company or global company will make in entering a market or granting a mandate or making an R and D investment is largely about things like: What's the rule of law? Am I likely to be nationalized? What's the state of the currency? What is the skill level of the workforce in that country? Am I going to be close to market? What is the value chain close to where I'm going to be producing?
Those are the key factors that companies are thinking about when they make those decisions, and it's less about taxes and incentives. What does that do for this economy when we have large-scale businesses locating here, delivering a mandate here? In other words, they've decided to assemble new vehicles or assemble airplanes or make pills here. That means a very large investment of capital, and it means an investment in the services and the supply chain immediately surrounding that. Communities like Windsor or Oshawa, where those large plants are, are going to benefit significantly from having that investment there—and not just from that one company, but from all the smaller companies around them, and that's how those start-ups grow.