Thank you.
Thank you to our witnesses today. We're four witnesses in on this Mercosur study. We had steel on the previous panel. Three of you have told us that you see no opportunities here, and in fact, potentially, that the one-way economic load is really exacerbated by this deal. That's quite interesting considering that we're putting a lot of resource behind this potential agreement.
Mr. DiCaro, I would like to speak with you a little bit about labour, because obviously you've been involved in quite a detailed way around NAFTA and the labour provisions that are being considered in a renegotiated NAFTA. You mentioned the 1998 social labour declaration that, like NAFTA, is non-binding, unenforceable, and has had much resistance from Brazil in particular. What I'd like to hear from you is what would need to be included in labour provisions in all agreements going forward. If we're setting a standard in NAFTA, what is that standard and why are we unevenly applying this to other deals and not using this as a pattern going forward?