That's a great question, and implied in what you said there, in fact, are a few things that are really important.
First of all, what attracts a student here from another country and what keeps one of our students from going somewhere else? There are a few factors involved.
Obviously, there is the quality of the research environment. Canada has been investing over the last 25 years to have research facilities that are at the right level in terms of that. We've been investing in terms of having leading professors who are able to be supervisors for students, and that's a key component.
We also have—and I think you were implying this—a kind of country that I think is super attractive for some of the world's leaders of the emerging generation. We have an inclusive society. We still have a lot of work to do, but we are devoted and committed to being an inclusive society. We're a society that I think in many ways corresponds to the ideal of a 21st-century world, a world in which we support a way of living and a way of being that I think is really recognized around the world.
In terms of the academic world and in terms of our communities, I think we have some of the real makings of being a magnet both for our students who stay and for others around the world. At the same time, though, we cannot send a message to our own students and to the world that we don't really think they're a good investment at an international level. They do need to eat. They need to pay for housing. They need all of that.