Thank you, all, for being here today.
I'm going to start with Mr. Bélanger.
On Monday, here, we had a walkout of graduate students across the country. Thousands of them here in Ottawa showed up on Parliament Hill. On Tuesday, we had Science Meets Parliament. I don't know if that was a coincidence or what, but we had top young researchers here on Parliament Hill. We had a reception with people like Dr. Mona Nemer, Canada's chief science adviser, and Frédéric Bouchard, who chaired and wrote the report on the Canadian research ecosystem. That report was put forward by this government.
I talked to all of them. There was just a general consensus that this question of increasing the funding of postgraduate students is such low-hanging fruit, such an obvious thing. Everybody was shocked that nothing had been done in the budget.
When I look at Dr. Bouchard's report and the U15 budget asks, I see that they are more or less the same. They want an increase of 10% per year for the next five years for research funding in Canadian universities and 5% per year for the next five years after that, and that is just to catch up to the United States and other countries.
We talk about how this is a lot of money. Well, we are falling behind. This is the information world, where we have to make these investments or Canada will be left as a backwater in the world.
I'm just wondering if you could comment on those reports—Dr. Bouchard's report and the U15 asks, what the grad students are asking. Just put it in context with what's happening in the United States. Finland was mentioned.