 I think we can help to promote those parts of the economy that have been the kind of Cinderella sectors of the Welsh economy in the past. I'm thinking of all the really essential things like food, water, energy, social housing, health, adult social care. None of those sectors have really had the attention that they've really deserved. Certainly they haven't had the attention compared to foreign firms for example. So we're rebalancing what we focus on and we're valuing what's intrinsically significant. It helps to promote firms that are more locally embedded, firms that are more concerned with their local community. So by promoting those type of firms you're promoting and nurturing the economy and the communities in which they're based. So it's not just an economic policy. The foundation economy supports both economy and local society. Well if we think that the foundation economy consists of those really essential things in life about food, water, energy, social housing and so forth, I think we judge it by a new set of metrics, not just the gross domestic product per head metrics of the past, but by a new era of well-being metrics. The things that make us healthier and happier and help us to flourish. So we need to design metrics that can reflect those new conditions, not just income, narrowly conceived.