If I may, Chair, that's where I think, as the economy changes and grows, particularly increasingly towards services and knowledge, those jobs tend to be higher paid and require higher skills over time.
This agreement, to some extent, is largely a services agreement. Probably, the case is that over time, probably on balance, on the services side, if all domestic regulations are attractive—because it's not only a trade deal; it's tax arrangements, it's infrastructure, it's labour laws, so you have the whole package—it might. On the manufacturing side it's less so, unless it's very high-end manufacturing, and Canada to some extent has been quite successful on the higher end of manufacturing, slowly, but it is occurring. For some of what I would call the traditional manufacturing—and even the resources, as people move out of agriculture—those jobs disappear over time.
I've given you a long-winded way to say, “No, not necessarily". Probably, if electronic commerce and if the services are strong and if research and development is strong enough in areas of high technology, those jobs will increase over time.