Thank you very much.
I think there are two things to say.
One is what we need to be attracting. Obviously we've talked about policies to bring more labour into Canada, and we need to increase our economic immigration. Second, we need to be increasing the incentives to have capital located here.
We need more automation in Canada. We need to become less reliant on labour alone. If we do that, we'll have a higher probability of achieving the level of competitiveness in our manufacturing—whether it's in food, automotive, machines or biotech—to where we are more competitive versus our competitor countries.
That's been a problem for Canada for decades. We've fallen behind. Our capital stock is old. We don't use the latest technology. We've substituted labour for capital, and that's been a problem.
We've advocated strongly that we need to find ways to incentivize so that we get more investment in Canada in the industrial sector and we can become more resilient.