 But clearly on that end of the spectrum in the conversation this morning, we all understand that you can't let Tom word and have too much caffeine and he may have had an extra cup of coffee this morning. I worry that this conversation is being taken, we're having this conversation in a very anarchic-centric way without asking what's going to happen with investments in technological change and productivity increases outside of Africa. Look at what could happen in Southeast Asia if Cambodia allows a man-water to get their act together through the infrastructure of the Mekong River Delta exporting out of Ochi-Men City. Ten years from now, Erie has varieties that are drought-tolerant, submergent-tolerant, and saline-tolerant. So we're not going to lose productivity, we're going to increase productivity. We're going to have twice as many rice exports out of this region, ten years from now that we have now. How is Africa going to compete with that? Oh, they won't. They'll just put up the trade barriers and try to be self-sufficient locally. That will be the kiss of death. That will guarantee that you don't get the policy environment you need, you won't get the right kind of infrastructure, you won't have the investments, you won't get the productivity gains, and it will leave Africa behind again. I was part of an intellectual conversation in the early 1990s on lessons for Africa from Asia. It was just sort of opening up, it was just apparent after the 1980s that Indonesia finally figured out how to have sustained economic growth. It looked like Indonesia in 1960 was way poorer than Nigeria, Thailand was poorer than Ghana. So there was something that went on, were there any lessons there? I went back and I reread the lessons. The lessons were basically policies. You simply have to get pro-agriculture policies. You have to get macro-economic policies that are relatively open, reasonably stable, competitive exchange rate, make the investments, build your agricultural research capacity, get that technology out to farmers. There's no magic here, there's no secrets here, but the problem said it yesterday. It's really hard to sustain a favorable policy environment for agriculture. It's just hard to do, and most of Asia has sort of figured out how not to kill agriculture. Africa is still learning how to nurture agriculture. And maybe I'm a pessimist in thinking that we've still got a pretty big gap between those two policy realities. And I hope that you guys can be on the cutting edge of getting the policy environment in place. But as you say, it's hard to do that from a bureaucracy that really pretty much has to be done from inside. Thank you very much. Thank you.