I think it's important to start from the understanding that development aid has a fundamental overriding objective, which is poverty reduction in developing countries. That's essential. That shouldn't change.
The idea of tying aid, saying we're going to help you out only if you're buying Canadian products, doesn't wash internationally and it doesn't wash in Canada. The Canadian business community doesn't want to see the government move in that direction. However, Canada has significant stores of expertise in areas like agrifood, financial services, microfinance, infrastructure, engineering, and significant capital sitting in pension plans and investment funds that could help achieve a lot of the development objectives in these markets. Oftentimes they're not being connected to those opportunities.
We're looking at ways that we can help better connect that expertise to those opportunities. If there's an international company or entity that can do it better, by all means, but we want to make sure that Canadian companies have a level playing field to be able to get involved in those projects and, ultimately, improve development outcomes.