The point I was trying to make was that our Prime Ministers said in 2010 that by 2015 we should reach $15 billion in trade. That was the target set for us and I think it was very sincere and done for a very noble reason, namely to challenge us.
However, to date I have never seen a road map for that. Typically, if there were a road map that said, for the sake of argument, that $8 billion was to come from the nuclear industry and that trade did not occur in that industry, then that $8 billion wouldn't happen. So at least we would know where and why we had fallen short.
My biggest point is that while numbers do have value when we hear them, it's always good to understand what constitutes those numbers. How much of the $15 billion was India going to do, and how much were we going to do? Since both prime ministers said the same thing, their intentions were very good.
For us to challenge ourselves and to even understand if we are on the right track or if we need to do something different, we need to have some kind of a road map. We need to have some information on that. That's what I was saying.
As for your point on how we can do that, progress in the larger regulated area is going to happen with the help of CEPA and FIPA. Those are what are going to help us because they will create some strong rules and regulations under which I'm sure both countries can operate productively.
As far as services are concerned, some of which are regulated as Suresh mentioned, that has to be covered under CEPA. But other services, like the one I referred to at the beginning, concern small companies. Even when Canada was not doing anything in India, these companies were doing business there and will continue to do so. They won't be affected by the CEPA until they grow to a level where they have to start working with the regulated industry in India.
So a small IT company may be doing business right now, but tomorrow if it wants to do something with the regulated industry, that will fall under CEPA. At that time, we'll need that advantage.
So I don't think there is anything that goes to the question about what we are doing or what we can do. I think we have to get CEPA done in a reasonable time. We have to get some road map in place so that we can judge and learn from that.