Good morning.
I think we're in early days in the negotiations with India on services. We haven't actually officially exchanged requests yet, but the joint study done between Canada and India has identified some of the complementarities in services between our two economies. As pointed out by Don, there are a lot.
I think that for Canada we have a lot of expertise to sell in India. Engineering firms were mentioned by Don. I think that's a strong advantage of Canada abroad, not just in India, but in most emerging markets. We have the engineering firms that can bring in the design and special specific skills. Often, they're specializing in different areas.
We mentioned energy and energy services as one area. Electricity distribution is another area in which Canada has a lot of skills. There are also oil and gas exploration and infrastructure--building and architects--as Don mentioned as well. There are a lot of Canadian firms that are very active and obviously look at the Indian market as a great area for expansion.
Another advantage for us is obviously that in these negotiations we are looking for more transparency. Often companies will raise the fact that they don't necessarily know the regime that operates in India. So transparency would be one area, as well as just binding the current regime. In many cases, India has taken autonomous liberalization in various areas—financial services is one example—but hasn't bound this. So companies aren't always assured that they are going to have the same investment or service conditions that are currently in existence. So an advantage of the CEPA will be to bind the current regime. That's what Canada would be seeking in an agreement.
On the other way back, of course, as Don mentioned, India is the 13th-largest services exporter in the world. They are actually a larger services exporter than Canada; we're 18th in the statistics. They have a lot of advantages. Information technology has been mentioned; that's an area where India has expanded quite a lot. Call centres have been mentioned, too.
India tends to make known their interest that they are obviously looking at different modes. We talked about the modes of service supply, but obviously their interests are in temporary entry of their workers, as well as in cross-border, which would be with information technology as an example.