Our experience in looking at this has been that as countries open their borders for the free flow of ideas and free trade, of course, it also opens up the markets for abuse. We haven't seen a direct correlation between free trade and the trafficking industry, though. It doesn't mean free trade causes trafficking, and it's not a link that we have found exists at all.
To the contrary, what we've found works best in our programming is when we empower young women to start their own small businesses if they want to. For example, in one of the programs we have in Cambodia, they're trained to choose whether they want to open their own restaurant, whether they want to be hairdressers, or whether they want to do something else. These are very common and very easy businesses to start. They were being trained, but no government or NGO was giving them training on the business side of it to actually make sure they didn't run out of money at the end of the month and starve. That's really where a lot can be done.
We heard a lot about micro-credit in the last week. There are some advantages to it and some disadvantages too.
Certainly, at the individual level, I think individual enterprise is where you can really help to stop someone from being sucked into human trafficking. It's really at that level, and it's not at the trade agreement level.