It does not look good for us is the simple answer. If you go to Germany, the U.K., Australia or any of the countries in Scandinavia, they are all paying much higher levels. Their entire systems have been increasing in recent years, because there's a race to try to own innovation and discoveries.
Most countries in the G7 are trying to race well above 3% of their total GDP to research and development, with a lot of that going into training of graduate students and post-docs. Canada's decreasing its investment in research and development. We're now tied for last in the G7 at 1.6%.
Wanting to get more industry here, going back to an earlier question, it's not going to happen if we are investing half as much as the other countries in the G7 that we're competing against. We are not competitive.