Yes. I have a couple of comments, if I may.
The Norwegian economy also has changed over the last twenty or thirty years. The textile industry is gone, the shoe industry is gone, and so on, and we import more and more of those things that we need in our daily life. We're changing into high-tech; we're changing into service industries, and so on. I think that's part of the globalization, and we have been successful so far.
One of the answers in terms of why is that we succeeded in bringing the women into the workforce. A very high percentage of women are working. It's the same in Iceland, the same in Sweden, and so on.
When it comes to Quebec, it's very dangerous for a foreigner to have a view on that, of course. But if I may be so frank, I think most challenges we meet in the world today have to be met with more cooperation between nations—on the environmental problem, climate change, and so on and so on. Looking from outside, I have to admit that it's very difficult to see what kind of problems you're going to solve better as an independent nation in Quebec, being where you are, with the neighbours you'll want to have, and so on. You may have good answers to that, of course, but we're talking about having to be a sovereign nation, and I think interdependence in the modern world is escalating.