Well, I think it comes back to Prime Minister Abe's economic plan, the plan that he ran on and the plan that he was elected on. He remains a strong leader in Japan. It's sort of commonly known as Abenomics, and it included monetary easing, some fiscal reforms, tax reforms, and opening its markets to trade.
What I think Japan has realized is that its neighbours and many of its like-minded countries, as we call them in international affairs, similar G7 countries, have been much more open to international trade, which has allowed their industries to become more competitive, to be more innovative; whereas in Japan and the agriculture sector perhaps in particular, but maybe other sectors.... And this is not my personal view; this is what his vision for the country is, as it has been expressed by Prime Minister Abe, that kind of modernization and openness, which would lead to innovation, is going to be important. The agriculture community, for example, is aging. The rice farmers' average age—and I'm not going to get the actual age right—is not young.
So they need to consider some domestic reforms, and this is part of the three arrows, as they call it, in his economic plan for modernizing and strengthening the Japanese economy.