It was founded in 1995 by a great Quebecker, I might add. Thank you for taking over for him.
You said at the beginning of your presentation that it was pretty clear that the Investment Canada Act is essential and that any country that is the least bit evolved will protect certain sectors, try to prevent head offices from moving away and provide some oversight for its most valued sectors.
More recent aspects of Quebec history have very clearly demonstrated the importance of having policy levers and institutions that work in partnership with private companies, while always maintaining a state-level strategy. This is less obvious in Canada's case. With respect to the Investment Canada Act, you said that it's fine, but it's clearly not enough.
Since you gave some examples of what's happening in other countries, particularly Great Britain, it really made me want to ask the following: Should Canada be looking at what's happening in the United States, this bastion of the free market?