Yes, this is much more basic. This is more about looking at licensing and certification matters and trying to ensure that the regimes for the members of the WTO provide a minimum standard of treatment with respect to these types of procedures.
For instance, if you are in a professionally regulated sector and looking to export your services to another jurisdiction, and you have to apply for a licence in order to provide that service, there are certain rules in place—which, hopefully, we're going to achieve through this agreement—that will allow that service supplier a higher degree of confidence that their application is being processed and regarded in a manner that is similar to what you have in Canada.
It's basically an outcome that we hope will raise the standards in other jurisdictions, because in Canada we already have a very high standard in terms of openness in this regard. It's a matter of putting our service suppliers, in this case, on a much more competitive footing with a wider range of WTO members.
This is also a plurilateral initiative. It involves about 60 WTO members. It's not, obviously, as.... The ideal situation would have this be a fully multilateral arrangement, but we're certainly moving the bar forward in this instance.