Yes, without any question. I think you have to look at it from three different perspectives. One is the perspective of our not being in the deal and the limits on economic opportunity that would flow from that. There are different perspectives on this, but given that we think the deal is positive, not being in the deal would be a negative. It would shut us out from opportunities that we'd otherwise be able to capitalize on, either as a bank or an economy, and the financial system would participate in that, obviously.
The second is the opportunities that it provides in the short run, in the sense that we are opening markets. Canadian firms will benefit from that and, obviously, the financial industry will be banking the firms that benefit from that, so there is an advantage there.
I think the third and longer-term aspect, which is possibly even more beneficial, is competitive pressure. There's very well established literature on this, that opening markets increases competitive pressure, that competitive pressure increases productivity, and that productivity is the basis upon which the standard of living increases. Over a longer period of time, as we open markets, develop, and become more competitive, our standard of living increases. That's great for all Canadians and, obviously, it's great for the financial industry as well, because we bank Canadians.
I would look at it from those three different perspectives.