As I said, both countries are demandeurs at the TPP. The other nine look at our behaviour. The reason that the Japan-Australia agreement is so hard to strike is partly because of the Japanese reticence, particularly in agriculture, which nobody else has mentioned this morning.
I would use this opportunity to comment that you can hardly think of two countries with more differing comparative advantage. This is a term that has not been used this morning, but it is a determinant of your success in trade. Canada's comparative advantage lies in natural resources and energy, unless we work with judicious policies, some of which have been outlined by Mr. Stanford. When I listened to him, it reminded me of Canada's innovation strategy.
It is not as if we're not doing some of these things. I'm glad to hear that we're not talking about going back to the industrial policies of the 1970s and 1980s, where it was obvious that governments could not—