I see, but we are talking about hundreds of thousands of potential jobs and the risk of Canada losing that opportunity. So that's something to think about, especially given the current size of this sector, which is lacking value added.
Thank you very much.
Mr. Lavoie, I will now go to you, since I thought your testimony on November 1, 2012 before the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology was very thought-provoking. You said the following:
...this week we published a report that compared the R and D tax credits for large companies across the OECD and some other emerging markets. We found that the international competitiveness of our R and D tax credit will fall from number 13 to number 17....
We already know that we have the worst record in the industrialized world in terms of public investment in R and D, the worst record in terms of patent development, and the second worst record in terms of the number of Ph.D.s we produce. Canada in the last six years has a lamentable record on R and D.
Could you comment a little more in terms of the competitiveness of the R and D tax credit falling to number 17, and what that means in terms of the Canadian economy?