Well, our main problem is that things are disjointed because we're doing these things, but we're not getting feedback to find out what's working. That's especially true for the emerging IT and AI research sector.
We actually just published a study showing that various governments' efforts to support research are basically voided after four or five years because we lose the intellectual property of those patents. They're resold as soon as they mature to the point of commercial viability.
We need more clearly defined operational objectives. More importantly, we need oversight to ensure the money we're investing is delivering results. We also have to be able to retain those results in our economic value chains and supply chains here in Canada and Quebec, especially in AI. That's absolutely key because we put so much effort into supporting this high-tech sector, and we excel in it, but we won't be able to maintain that position if we don't have better control over intellectual property and use it to our advantage.