No.
I'm just talking about specific domestic tax policies that actually limit the growth of a company. I know of companies, for example, that once they hit a certain threshold of revenue they're told not to grow anymore by their accountants because actually it's tax-punitive to grow.
We have things like that; I don't understand why we would ever do that. We want to grow companies. There are things like that in Canada that prevent growth.
Then, also, there are not the support programs around the smaller companies in the scale that we need them. When you're talking about the numbers of companies we have that are that small, what European companies have that we don't have is they.... Let's use Germany as an example, which tends to be the classic example of high-tech advanced manufacturing. They have that middle stock of companies, which is really their middle-sized companies. We've got 10 of them in Canada. They've got hundreds of them in Germany. They've got massive global-scale companies like Siemens and BMW and Mercedes. We have Bombardier. We just don't have the number and scale of companies.
When you're looking at exports from Europe into Canada or Europe to anywhere versus Canada to anywhere, they have the scale of companies that can pull a whole supply chain along with them. We don't have that. We need different tools in place. In particular, there's a wide variety of things that could help. Education of our SMEs, for example, on what market opportunities are—which is something I know that we've spoken about before—is a huge component. Small companies with 10 employees don't have the internal capacity to understand markets let alone actually develop foreign market opportunities.
Those are some of the structural differences that exist between Canada and, say, Europe or other countries, which we struggle with in Canada.