On that note, during the break, you and I were speaking about milkmen and how the supply is happening at the dairies and all of that. For me, I was born and brought up in India, and I can tell you about some of the things. If you were to go back 30 or 40 years to the way farming was done, you would see the bullocks and humans doing the farming. Now, most of them have moved to tractors.
I think that in India entrepreneurship is a big thing. Most people want to have their small business, but this is looking at whether the glass is half empty or half full. Having the opportunity of the supply chain, which I think is where we come into it, into a role, because Canada has the technology and the supply chain.... I think, again, that it's just about how we can brand it.
The best example I will give you of how a Canadian entrepreneur has to look at it is the Aakash tablet, done by Mr. Tuli, which costs, what, $30 or $40? It's done in Canada, but the market today for the Aakash tablet is much higher than what is in Canada. We might not know what an Aakash tablet is, but if you go to the Indian market, any student will know what it is. In fact, the company is not able to manufacture what the Indian market needs. There is always a shortage.
For the Canadian companies, the challenge will be to find something that fits the Indian market and then enter the Indian market, which, again, is going to help our economy.