One of the things we have been doing, because there have been questions such as “Why EFTA?”, is to make sure we had gone through and done our numbers to show that these countries, while they aren't necessarily the first countries that spring to mind, are still significant economic players. That was one example.
Another example—and keep in mind that there are no substantive provisions with respect to investment in this agreement, at this point—is that Switzerland, I think, is our fifth largest investor from abroad, through companies such as Nestlé and a couple of the pharmaceuticals. These are highly sophisticated countries with some big name companies.
For whatever reason—we had to redo our numbers in the last couple of days, because the 2007 trade stats came out just a few days ago—when we looked at them, we were quite surprised, frankly, to see that there had been a significant surge in our exports to these EFTA countries. The point was that if our math is right, then the exports to these four EFTA countries were more than to the 10 Latin American or South American countries combined, the ones I listed.
The point is, EFTA matters. This is an agreement that there is some real commercial significance to these countries currently, and we are confident that with the improved trade policy framework, it will grow in the future.