I'll try to take a shot at it, sure. I think my first response is that Canada is highly unusual compared to other jurisdictions in having an economic net benefit type of review for foreign investment. The vast majority of countries have either a national security review of foreign investments or no review of foreign investment whatsoever. Canada, along with Australia and a handful of other jurisdictions, is in a highly unusual and small group of countries that review certain inbound investments for benefit.
Second, with respect to your specific question, you're asking for information that, to my knowledge, has not been collected or analyzed by the government, which would be very difficult or challenging to do. Part of the reason that it would be challenging to provide you with an answer to that—that is to say, on the benefit of the net benefit regime—is that we don't know the “but for” scenario. We don't know what would have happened to that Canadian business if the foreign investment hadn't happened.
I can tell you from personal experience, anecdotally, that there are a lot of investments that have worked out very well. There are a lot of investments where, as I said in my opening remarks, the alternative to the investment was insolvency, and the foreign investment, the injection of foreign expertise, the injection of foreign capital, helped the Canadian business and saved jobs, and so—