There are two things. One is our focus on North American markets since the 1988 bilateral and then the 1994 NAFTA agreement, which was a great decision because the U.S. was growing in unprecedented terms and we benefited very greatly from that. However, it created a mindset in the Canadian business community not to look much beyond Houston, Atlanta, and Los Angeles.
Secondly, on the other side of the Pacific a similar thing was happening, where the ASEAN countries were increasing their trade among themselves and with other countries in Asia. This is a function of changing investment patterns in the world, where multinationals would set up facilities in different parts of East Asia, producing a different component of the overall product, of what we call production networks. That led to growing trade within East Asia, to some extent to the exclusion of trade outside the region.