Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I welcome our witnesses. I didn't know if we were going to have time for a final round of questions or not.
I have a couple of points.
Ms. Campbell, I want to pick up a little bit on Ms. Papillon's question on preferential tariffs. To me, I think it's fairly simple, so maybe I'm missing some part of this equation. You have a preferential tariff rate for countries that are emerging economies, developing third world nations, and that gives them some opportunity and some protection, quite frankly, for their industries to be at a competitive advantage to sell into more mature economies. That's quite simply what it was.
Although parts of these countries may still be emerging economies, the fact is that India's middle class is somewhere around 350 million people—larger than the entire population of the United States. China is becoming the second-largest export destination for Canada, and is the second-largest economy in the world. Certainly, I don't think we can call them emerging economies any longer. To me, I think what we're giving them is an incentive. They've lost their 3% advantage. They now have an incentive to sign trade agreements with Canada and to look quite seriously at a free trade agreement. Do you have a comment on that?