Sure. I think you're exactly right that there tends to be a lot of focus only on the tariffs, but the reality is that what we're negotiating is a comprehensive trade agreement. So there will be provisions on goods, on services, financial services, investment, temporary entry, and electronic commerce. This is going to cover a lot of ground.
The result that we talked about earlier on the modelling is focused only on the impact of tariff elimination, because that's all we really have the capability to model. We know from past experience that actually the benefits to the economy are substantially greater, because they get into all those other non-tariff areas that are virtually impossible to model; and a lot of it happens during the points I was making earlier about developing commercial partnerships in areas where that then gets leveraged into wider opportunities, breaking into value chains. So all of that happens through the closer economic integration that an FTA is designed to bring about.
Generally, the theory of trade liberalization, of course, is that you specialize in your areas of comparative advantage. So, all else being equal, that moves you up the value chain into higher-paid jobs and out of the areas in which you're relatively less competitive internationally. So that's exactly part of the aim of the FTA.