Thank you. It's a very interesting discussion today, folks.
I want to talk about trade discussions, which are always about balance. There are always people who think they won more, and other people who think they lost more.
Mr. Dias made the point that the auto sector is the largest manufacturing sector in the country. That's not true; it's actually food processing.
You also made a point on currency manipulation, and I couldn't agree with you more. There are side agreements under global discussions that take care of currency manipulation, should it rear its ugly head.
There is also a lot of talk about job loss, but there has never been much talk about job creation, so I'd like to hear your side of that. I know that on the last panel they talked about 20,000 jobs being lost immediately, but that's a worst-case scenario, and I don't see it happening. There are also the job creators. In the last 40 years, you've created 72,000 direct jobs. Do you see the opportunity to create more jobs as we increase our automotive footprint?
We're not dealing with domestic consumption of 30 million people, or even with the U.S. at 300 million people. We're dealing with 900 million people all over the world, and we can start to talk about global exports. Do you have a number that says which kinds of jobs could be created?