My point really is that focusing on the trade surplus or deficit with individual trading partners, like Peru or Colombia, or with individual countries is not, frankly, that relevant. Our overall trade surplus or deficit with the world is driven not by individual free trade agreements with these countries but rather by the other much broader forces in the global economy which I mentioned before, including commodity-market prices, exchange-rate fluctuations, differences in productivity, etc., as well as by broader issues of Canadian government policy.
So we don't see any strong link between a trade balance with one country and the impact of an FTA on that.