Fundamentally, we support TPP because we see the economic benefit trade brings locally, regionally, and nationally. We would really follow the same logical inference line that you follow such that if trade barriers are reduced within appropriate parameters and trade is increased, then the nation benefits, as do the communities local to the port.
With the scale of trade through the port, as I was emphasizing in my address, there are 57,000 jobs in the Lower Mainland alone involved purely in the supply chain, before we even start to consider those involved further up in the primary production activities. So without the ability to do a detailed economic analysis, we would still fundamentally support the logic that reducing barriers to trade will lead to improvements in the economy.