Thank you very much for your question.
I would say that, in many of these countries, they are still developing and many of their labour standards are not the same as in Canada, the U.S. or the EU. That is just the reality.
We don't want to harm workers whether it's Canadian workers or workers in those countries. We also have to respect that there's a lot that happens in Indonesia, ASEAN, India, South Korea and Taiwan that we're not as aware of, because we don't consume the news as much as we would the North American or the EU news cycle.
There's a lot that goes on, and it's very different because ASEAN is 10 countries. Indonesia is one of them. CPTPP has four of those countries from ASEAN, and then RCEP has 15 countries, of which there's another subgroup. There is a lot of complexity to it, but I don't think we should ever forgo lower labour standards for Canadians going into these trade agreements. What are we trading for, if not for the mutual prosperity of peoples from both those trading partners?