Thank you very much to all of the witnesses representing the three different countries. This has been most enlightening.
I would like to bring it back to the reason why we invited you and many other guests to appear before this committee. We wanted to see some examples from other countries that Canada could use to help industries within our country.
I was most encouraged to hear your comment, Ms. Lackey, that you actually do consult with your businesses before you talk about free trade agreements. I find that most encouraging.
I was happy to hear all three countries comment about the fact that you recognize that protectionism has to stop. Countries can't out-protect each other. We can't outspend in protectionism. To remind you of the number that I'm sure you're all aware of, $360 billion every year goes to protect farmers. The sad reflection on that is that less than $60 billion goes out in foreign aid. That's a number that has to change, and I was encouraged to hear you all talk about that.
There are lots of agricultural issues, I know, and those seem to be the largest stumbling blocks we find in any negotiation. To whoever wishes to speak on behalf of each country, I'd like to ask what criteria you use when you're looking at a free trade agreement. Yes, we all hope that the WTO gets back on track again in the next few weeks, and I do hold out a great deal of hope for that, but what plans do you have here? You've talked about some of your FTAs, but when you're looking at future ones, how much emphasis do you place on labour negotiations or labour inequities between these other countries? We've talked about some here in Canada, and we seem to run into a lot of problems with international labour standards. Is that critical or will that balance itself? Do you wait for your small and medium enterprises to ask your government to initiate FTAs? Or what criteria do you base those on?
I would ask all three countries to comment on that.