If you look at the level of production—and Oumar can speak to this in detail—we're producing as many cars as we buy. The Canadian market is $1.9 million, and I think there's two million dollars' worth of production in there. We're not out of sync with respect to that, but when you look at the capacity that we could have and those investments that have come to the country, that's where we're missing the competitive piece.
Some of it is about red tape, as the member from Oshawa was outlining. Some of it has been not having coordinated one-stop shopping from the Canadian government and the provincial governments. The U.S. states are very competitive when they make offerings to try to get these investments, because the math is pretty straightforward. One automotive-related manufacturing job leads to seven other jobs in the economy when you look at the supply chain. I think as policy-makers, this committee and all members of Parliament need to look at whether we're putting a competitive offering together when we're trying to attract investment.