We do get into it. In order for business to qualify for EDC support, it has to meet what we call Canadian benefit policy. So we look at the transaction from the standpoint of what benefits are going to be created here in Canada to qualify it initially for our support.
My point is only that the benefit has now moved away from merely identifying jobs created through manufacturing employment and is now extending to take into account things such as R and D or the overall administration that a company may provide to operate internationally. If they can gain a world mandate in a particular industry sector, what is the benefit that ultimately will be derived back here in Canada? In our Canadian benefit policy we will provide additional benefit to a small or medium-sized enterprise that is engaging in business, because we want to see them expand into the international marketplace.
So we do have a qualification criterion, but it has evolved in order to be more flexible in order to reflect the fact that sectors are not the same, that services are now becoming a much bigger component, that manufacturing or fabrication itself is only one component of the benefit model that Canada derives.