Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the witnesses for coming forward today. They were very interesting presentations.
I'd like to start with you, Ms. Healy. You referred to the structure of what we know of the South Korea-Canada free trade agreement, and that it's basically a NAFTA template. We know that since the start of the process of implementation of the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement, most Canadian family incomes have fallen, or the incomes of about two-thirds of Canadian families, according to StatsCan; and that the average debt load of the average Canadian family over the last 20 years has more than doubled.
I'm wondering to what extent the CLC has studies about the gutting of our manufacturing sector that's taken place at the same time, and what the impact would be of continuing with the same types of deals you mentioned. You prefaced your remarks by talking about the Korean deal, with your concern being that it would essentially be raw resources we'd be exporting, along with a lot of manufacturing jobs.
To what extent has the CLC studied the question of what's happened to manufacturing and good, family-sustaining jobs over the past 20 years?