Obviously, we haven't received specific numbers from industry, but based on what they've been telling us across the various sectors that are most affected by the outcomes, certainly the results are very comparable to what we've encountered here.
I would like to clarify that, as I mentioned, we do an analysis before any negotiation. On the notion of doing macroeconomic quantitative analysis during a negotiation in the expectation that people would have that as input into a negotiation, that doesn't happen. No country in the world does that. No negotiating team in any part of the world does that kind of analysis to inform themselves.
We had a team of over 150 people working on this negotiation. They were largely economists. They know their issues. We spoke intensively with the sectors that were involved. That's where we got our information, along with our own analysis and expertise. But on the notion of constructing and following a quantitative model to guide us in the negotiation, no one does that.