I think we're big enough to focus on both. Some of the statistics—and I live in Kitchener-Waterloo and so we're well aware of that speech—reflect the fact that the U.S. went through a very deep recession, for example. It's now coming back up I think, in a nice way. The recent forecasts show this for the advanced economies, while the emerging economies slow down.
If you look at the plan and you look at the sectoral breakdown of countries and what we're trying to sell in each, they're very different. I think if you are in certain industries—very advanced manufacturing for example, some services industries, professional services—you would want to focus on large, established economies because there are some new markets opened by new trade agreements, like the CETA, for example. There's an opportunity to sell there in a very rich, albeit a bit more slowly growing, market.
In emerging economies, obviously there is a demand for resources. There is a demand for certain types of more infrastructure investment that we can also provide, but I think the two are different. I think we can do both.