Yes.
Within the FTA negotiations, it's certainly in the area of services. One of the four modes of providing service is to invest in the other country: to establish a corporate presence in the other country to deliver the service. We are certainly hopeful that these negotiations will address questions of investment in services and that the dispute settlement system that applies to the FTA will then be available to service providers and investors in the Indian market.
With respect to services more generally, we expect services to be rather a cornerstone issue, a critically important issue in these negotiations and frankly on both sides. On the Indian side, it has already been made clear by their secretary of commerce, their deputy minister of commerce, if you will, that a priority in the negotiations on the Indian side will be the services sector. As you may know, the Indian economy and export model relies much more heavily on services than do those of other emerging economies.
Of course on the Canadian side we have our own services interests. I noted some of the more obvious ones: financial services, engineering, environmental services, and education services—a huge potential market in India. So we will be looking for reciprocal undertakings and obligations on the Indian side to those that we might contemplate on the Canadian.