Thank you very much.
Thank you all for being here, and thank you for sharing some of the great stories.
Mr. Whiting, I think you had a great way of putting it about how things were, and then co-ops developed, and how things have worked out or have gotten better because of it.
You each shared little bits of how successful people working together with each other, and with each other's success in mind, perhaps, other than their own, have made co-ops and credit unions and mutual insurance companies and the like all more successful from a statistical point of view in that they're more likely to succeed over a period of time when private business may have failed. Co-ops tend to succeed at a rate of almost two to one. Certainly we're seeing now, across Canada, 100-year anniversaries on many things, such as mutual insurances and credit unions and stuff that has been around.
Can you tell me what you think the answer is for that? Why are co-ops more successful? Give me a very short answer, if you could, because I'd like to get a couple more questions in. As well, what causes a cooperative enterprise to be more successful on that scale than a private enterprise?
Go ahead, Ms. Kelderman.