Well, if you want to base it in a western perspective, you could go back to Schopenhauer and Nietzsche: you feel better about yourself if you're giving. This is your largesse, and it's about helping people, but it's also about making you feel better.
Trade doesn't give you the same sort of good feeling. What trade does, on the other hand, is give the recipients the ability to make their own decisions about buying education and buying health. So rather than our giving them education and health, it's kind of nice when they can earn money to make their own decisions about whether they want to invest in buying health and other things.
Let me note one last point. In terms of groups in Canada, we haven't talked much about the diaspora, the Colombian diaspora. In terms of groups that support the agreement, we have a small but incredibly entrepreneurial Colombian diaspora. If you compare it to several of the other diasporas—the Haitian diaspora, let's say—the Colombian diaspora is composed of three or four professional organizations, of associations of Colombian professionals. These are people who are deeply involved in business and are very entrepreneurial.
An agreement like this will enable them to also do more; it will unleash the talent of people who have come to Canada from Colombia and are engaged in business and trade. So in terms of impacting the situation in Colombia, this is another vehicle for transmitting Canadian experience and Canadian ideas; it's an interchange with the country. The Colombians are incredibly open to receiving ideas and to working with us. This is a vehicle we have that the free trade agreement will impact.
It's not just in places like Toronto or Montreal that we see this. The largest immigrant population from Latin America in Quebec City is not Haitian; the Colombians outnumber them. In places like Quebec City, this agreement will also have the potential to unleash new economic activity and will be important to people in the community.