That number is also derived from the Canada-EU joint economic study that we completed before we initiated the negotiations. That was a very in-depth examination across the economy of the benefits that could be gained on both sides in this negotiation, by top economists both in Europe and in Canada. When you take the kinds of GDP gains that were foreseen in that study, you can then extrapolate what that would most likely mean in terms of jobs. That's where the number of 80,000 jobs came from.
But as the minister stated earlier too, our view is that that study probably underestimated the gains by a significant amount, because one of the assumptions made was that the Doha Round of WTO negotiations would have been completed. Since that has not yet happened, the gains we will see out of this negotiation are that much greater because tariffs won't be cut by the Doha Round in any near future, so the advantage we will have over other trading partners will be that much greater.