Thank you for the question.
Very quickly, again, I brought a document that shows the growth of investment since the mid-eighties, and we have honoured our commitment of 25 years. This is an updating of that.
To your question, we believe that the signal coming from the Canadian government regarding innovation is a very strong and powerful one. We can do our research anywhere in the world. We have good science in this country. We have some very good infrastructure, and, frankly, the government has invested quite well in basic research. What we are trying to do now is to be able to say that we can be competitive.
There are a number of other aspects, whether it's pricing regimes, which we talked about, or it's manpower or regulatory issues or questions of reimbursement. In CETA, at least, we have a signal that we can attract some of those new dollars.
One of the problems is that it's going to take two years to implement. Over the next two years, we still don't have those weaknesses that CETA is trying to correct. But the commitment of Rx&D is to use CETA and the improvements therein to attract more investment to Canada. When Canada moved Bill C-22 and Bill C-91, that gave a signal to increase those investments.
First and foremost, you need the right place to invest in good science. Canada has it, but we can't rest on our laurels. Science is improving around the world, and that's why we needed the harmonization. That's why we're hoping for three out of three, if I can say it that way, because the competition is ferocious.
But this is a step forward, and we're going to attempt to attract new dollars.