I might just add a word to that, if I may. I'm also a university chancellor, and one of the things we need is a much better dialogue between the business sector and our educational sector in terms of looking at what the demands are going to be in the future, what sorts of needs there are, how we can better prepare people for entry into the workforce, how we ensure that the skills we're producing are skills that we can use productively. That dialogue is something that can't be mandated by government, but it's something that those of us in the academic sector and the business sector have to show leadership on.
You're absolutely correct that increasingly international business needs to be an essential part of people's education. The world is globalizing and this is ultimately the fundamental decision that you're called upon to make. To look at TPP, it comes down to world view. Is it possible to build a wall around Canada and for us to go back to the good old days where we were free from competition?