 Right now I think a lot of the perpetuating challenges that we have in global poverty are due to lack of access, lack of access to the technology, lack of access to a formal economy, lack of access to social inclusion. This is really about that exclusion and what does it take to get to inclusion? And the ideas that I offer are all pointing towards those what it would take to provide that base. It would take to provide that inclusive foundation that would allow either Governor President Romney or a President Obama to achieve the goals that they set forth in their speeches. We have new ways to promote access to broadband, to mobile phones, to monitor the way that we are doing global development and doing aid. And so I think that we really need to be doubling down on our efforts to use new technology to innovate not only in the programs that we support but also the way in which we do aid itself. So I think by virtue of that increasing the impact on the individuals and on the poor themselves but also making the work that we do as a government much more efficient, much more effective. The recommendation that I make is to really focus on big ideas, high impact, high leverage ideas where one intervention, one program can have multiple impacts. So for example, linking cash transfer flows, aid flows, the actual money that we're giving to really victims or to poor disadvantaged people in developing countries, which is a large chunk of our foreign aid portfolio, to link those with financial access, with opportunities to save in a bank, to slowly build assets that could be then reinvested in education, in a micro-enterprise, in home ownership, all the types of things that we also invest in here in the United States that help lift our own people out of poverty. These are the same types of ideas that will resonate and will work in developing countries as well.