I would say that any time those artificial restrictions are imposed on competition, whether it's through closed bidding, putting in regional preferences and keeping non-local contractors out, etc., one sees immediately that prices, innovation, productivity, etc., suffer as a result. There's nothing that breeds productivity and innovation more than competition, open, level, fair competition.
I think that's a principle that has been embraced by our country, certainly in our international dealings, certainly through the Agreement on Internal Trade, etc., and it's not a situation of saying—we certainly aren't saying—that unionized construction costs more than non-unionized construction. What we're saying is that when you restrict competition in an arbitrary manner like this, you stifle the competitive pressures that thrive in a free and open marketplace, and that cannot work to your benefit.