 As I see it, everything is connected to everything else, and if we deal with issues in silos, we don't make the necessary connections. So community safety, low levels of crime are relevant to the success of the economy, as well as to social factors. We know that adverse childhood experiences, things that happen early in life, lead to bad things later in life. If we don't make all those connections and ensure the economy is built on being a secure, prosperous, productive community, then we won't get any of the elements of it right. I think it's about much more than supporting individual businesses. It's about making connections. Very often if you're investing and buying things locally, that means the money actually gets recycled into the local economy. That means people in work. It means a positive environment for the businesses that we hope are going to thrive in the local economy. Now, it's not about shutting the door and just doing things in our own area. It's about being responsible. It's about making the connections between the economy, the environment, the well-being of people who work in businesses, and the strength and resilience of the communities within which people live. Because that's where businesses do their work. That's where they draw their workforce. And it's essentially my view to make those connections. As I say, everything's connected to everything else. I think I would see growing confidence and understanding on the part of businesses of how their work connects with the other things that strengthen local communities. I think it would be about local communities perhaps valuing the contribution of business more because they can see businesses putting more back into the community. There are good examples of this. There are examples where communities are very strongly connected with businesses, where businesses are very well rooted into their communities. But I actually took reform of the Companies Act to a stage that it was about to go to the House of Commons when I was Minister for Trade and Industry. And we put into that legislation something about understanding the long-term needs of the workforce, the connectivity with the local environment in terms of the way that businesses do their business. And making all those connections is about developing into a grown-up society. So I would say it about everybody understanding and being confident about the connections between a variety of different things, including procurement, including the work of local businesses, including the connection between the public sector and the businesses that are important to all of us.