Okay. Monsieur André, I guess, doesn't have a question. I have a short comment and question. Then, if you have any short wrap-up comments, gentlemen, we would certainly allow for them.
When the free trade agreement was signed, and then NAFTA, there was a lot of concern about textiles, about the furniture industry, and about how the wine industry was going to be devastated. It's interesting that the wine industry never seemed to miss a beat; it seemed nothing but up, totally against all forecasts. The furniture industry, you were saying today, Mr. Myers, did suffer some very severe difficulties, but now it's many times larger than it ever was before. The textile industry probably—at least to my knowledge—hasn't really done well.
You said we have about a $20 billion trade deficit with China now. I'm wondering if that is necessarily a long-term thing, or whether it may be a short-term thing. As the Chinese economy develops, people become wealthier. They already want top-end goods—and possibly services, I'm not sure. I'm wondering whether that deficit could be a temporary thing and, if Canada is well-positioned to take advantage of this new market that's developing in China, whether it might help our trade surplus with China. Do you have any comments on that?
Yes, Mr. Myers.