I put it as a scenario to the committee. We should always be aware that we are a relatively smaller country in these negotiations. Geopolitically, we don't possess the same military projections, the same literal raw power that the other members of this negotiation do. Those can come sometimes with intangible benefits inside negotiations. It's something we should be aware of until we're assured that there is a single tariff schedule being negotiated.
Currently, as you may know, the negotiations, as I understand it, are being conducted bilaterally, and the objective is to then multilateralize those bilateral gains to all parties. Until that process actually happens, we should just simply be aware that there is a possibility this could turn into a series of bilateral agreements under the title of TPP, and that, in our view, would be bad, because as I said, businesses would find it very confusing to try to look at 11, 12, or 13 tariff schedules and move their products around the region.
We certainly hope that's not the outcome.