It's a really interesting issue, products interfacing with countries. If you look at trade patterns, Canada is almost two countries on this issue. You have Ontario and Quebec being manufacturing-oriented but also being very U.S.-oriented. On the flip side, once you go west, we're more aimed toward Asia, but if you look at the list of things that western provinces export to Asia, it's all natural resources. You can just go through the top 20 commodities and you find almost nothing that's not related to the earth, to what's available below or above the soil or in the sea. That's the thing, and that's the fact, and that has not changed, that really sharp orientation of ours in terms of exporting natural resources to Asia.
It's very different from the U.S. The U.S. does export manufactured goods to Asia, and so it is a puzzle that Canadian manufacturers are so good at exporting to the U.S. but not so good at exporting to Asia. The fact that the resource exporters are good at exporting to Asia is not that surprising when you think about the huge growth that's going on in Asia. A lot of that growth requires raw materials of the kind that we can provide: fertilizer, ores, etc.