There are two things we would tell you, and it goes back in our history, and that is, manufacturing follows sales. The greater the opportunity for us to reach a market, the greater the opportunity there is for us to build manufacturing. This has been our history.
The other aspect of this is that keeping the NAFTA rules in place has often been touted as what will save the Canadian industry. Clearly, that same period of time has demonstrated there has been a drift of Canadian manufacturing toward Mexico. The NAFTA region was set up in such a way that if you wanted to have the lowest cost of production, you were going to move south. That is not the most compelling argument for manufacturing.
What you want is a manufacturing operation that provides the highest quality, the greatest responsiveness to the marketplace, and is able to manufacture high value-added, technologically advanced products. That is what we've brought into our Canadian facilities.
With that in mind, I'm confident that with a lot of hard work, we've built a competitive manufacturing base here in Canada. But over the long haul, it's very difficult for us to think that staying behind tariff barriers, and in particular impeding Japanese manufacturers' ability to respond effectively to the marketplace is going to create net benefits for the sector in Canada.