The incubation assistance is there, but there are still a lot of obstacles that researchers have to go over to launch a company. If you look at AI and software, it's often easier for a Ph.D. to just get out of the university system and rewrite an algorithm than to try to take the algorithm they've developed in their Ph.D. out of the university. It's workable, but it's a workaround.
To answer the first part of your question, which I think is important, it's an emulation game. Growing a company to a billion-dollar valuation is not something you learn in a program at school or in an incubator. You make it, you learn how to do it and then you help others make it. That is why an ecosystem....
We mentioned the U.S., but they have a size and a cash advantage. However, look at what happened in France recently, or Sweden or Israel, which may be comparable nations to Canada. It's an emulation game, so the more velocity there is and the more entrepreneurs there are who have grown a company based on IP assets, the more they will grow other companies and the more their employees will—