Can I start with that last one? That's actually a massive concern we have right now. If you look at what happened a decade ago when the dollar rose, we lost thousands of manufacturers and other businesses in Canada, but specifically export-focused manufacturers. In southern Ontario, especially in the auto sector, which frankly had priced contracts into a 70¢ dollar and had no chance of competing when the dollar rose, when the dollar rose by 30% in a few months, you saw the impact in thousands of job losses.
One of the things we're certainly preaching to our members and we're talking to parliamentarians about is that there needs to be a focus on supporting investment in manufacturing now while the dollar's low so they'll be competitive when the dollar rises. It's not going to stay at 70¢ forever, and if they don't do that, the same cycle that happened 10 years ago is going to happen again.
On the education side of things, very quickly, I think you're right. Something that really frustrates us is the lack of business skills that are taught to youth. I'm not talking about in universities; I'm talking about down in the primary grades. I have kids in grade 5 and grade 3 and they know nothing about business and what goes on in the real world. I think we need to start earlier teaching them to be entrepreneurs, teaching them about global business and about how things work, and make that a core part of our curriculum right across the country. Then when they get to university, they can start understanding it in more detail, and then they'll be more useful to the business community when they graduate and they won't have to learn on the job all the time.