In terms of investment, that's a very interesting question because if you look at the foreign direct investment flows into Canada and you go back to, say, 2017 and 2018—we'll have the data for 2019 shortly—we had minimal flows into Canada in 2017. It looked as if we might have said that we knew what was going on: the climate was not that great, but we had two major divestitures in the oil sector. Two Canadian companies were buying back U.S. companies, so it looked like an outflow of funds, when in fact it was a good-news story. So 2017 was a slower year on the whole for attracting FDI for that particular reason. Then 2018 was pretty good.
As a proportion of GDP, we attract a lot of FDI. From that perspective we're doing quite well. There might have been less investment during the negotiations and whatnot by businesses located in Canada, but on the whole we still saw good flows of FDI.