The work that the Naylor report did was important. It was completed five years ago. It sketched a road map for Canada, and there has been some significant action on that. I heard David Naylor's testimony last night, and I think he would concur that for a government report, much has been accomplished.
The landscape has changed in the ensuing five years. Some of the challenges remain the same and some have become more urgent. As I was saying in my opening testimony, some of those initial investments are starting to age out and flatten out. At the same time, our international competitors are reinvesting at new scale with new urgency. We want to make sure people don't think that, well, we did that report five years ago and
it's all taken care of.
It's not complete. There's more work to be done, and we need to take into account what we've learned through the pandemic about how we can invest.
If I might take one more minute, I was really pleased by your question about how we make sure that all of Canada benefits from these investments. I have been to the Université du Québec à Rimouski and I've been to the Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue, and we can see world-class, first-class research being done in those communities for the benefit of those communities, for the benefit of Quebec and for the benefit of Canada.