Well, as I said, for a country like Canada, which is highly trade dependent—I don't know if “middle economy” is quite the right term, but that's a term you often hear used to describe Canada—I think the World Trade Organization is crucial, and I think global rule setting is crucial. The challenge is that as an organization it has not been able to move forward with the Doha agenda as we would have liked to see. That said, there's some very good work happening in Geneva to adjust to that reality and to harvest, as they say, as many outcomes as possible.
This is more of a speculation, because we can't really know, but I think that as some of these larger regional or bilateral agreements come together—for example, the United States is negotiating now with Europe, we've negotiated with Europe, there's the TPP, and Japan and the European Union are negotiating—it may well provide an impetus for everybody to go back to Geneva and say, “Okay, let's take all of this and globalize it.” Again, this is speculation on my part, but I think that would be a very good outcome from a trade policy perspective.