 Bertrand Collomb, thank you for being with us on WPC TV. What do you think are the prospects for Europe in the next five years, in particular the Eurozone? Are we going to enter into the sort of malaise, prolonged malaise that Japan has suffered? Well, I guess in Europe the situation is never as good as it looks or never as bad as it looks. So I think Europe may have still some capability to rebound because I believe the diagnostic on what Europe needs to do is relatively clear. The difficulty is to do it. And I believe that compared to Japan, Europe has more capability to move and change than Japan has had in the past. So Abe is trying to move Japan, but it's, I believe, more difficult to move Japan and even to move France, which is, you know, not easy. I was here to ask you about France. I mean, one could say that France at the moment is the sick man of Europe, or the Eurozone, and it's very important that it should somehow recover its vitality. Yeah, the only comfort we have is that ten years ago Germany was the sick man of Europe, and in ten years, you know, the situation has reversed, and the situation has reversed because Germany did the right things, but also because France did the wrong things, and it's very clear. And the curves of the unemployment especially, the curves of the lack of competitiveness, which means the increase of unit cost, unit labor cost, compared between France and Germany are extremely clear. Over ten years, there's been between 15 and 25 percent gap, which has been created. Not surprising that it leads to results that we have now. Not surprising that it won't reverse itself in six months or a year, or even five years' term of a president. What has been created in ten years will probably take, let's say five, seven, maybe ten years, to be corrected. Again, regarding France, I think the diagnosis is probably about shared by everybody. The difficulty is to do something about it, and to make it acceptable to French people. I mean, the diagnostic is the need is to find a French version of Schroder. No, it is sure that we should restore competitiveness by reducing our costs and by making more flexible our economy, and especially our labor market. Even Mr. Macron, the current Minister of Finance, is suggesting things about working more on Sunday and that type of thing. Now, the issue is not what to do, is it possible to do it? A lot of people, right or left, have said over time that our French society is fragile, that we shouldn't push it too much because then it will break. In companies, we don't have a feeling that French people are so fragile, and when people understand the situation where they are given the right information, when they trust the people who give them the information, they are able to mobilize themselves and fight. The problem is to get France back into a fighting attitude. There is currently a sort of desperate attitude, and it is very bad because not only it's very bad for French, but it's very bad for outside because whenever you go in the US or maybe in Korea, I don't know, but people have a terrible impression about what's going on in France. The French are probably one of the reasons for that because whenever they go outside, they complain, they have a negative mood. France is currently the country where the mood is the worst, but what's interesting is that when you ask people, their mood or their impression about the country as a whole is very bad, their impression about themselves or their company or what they can do is much better. Well, on that positive note, amongst a lot of negativity, the positive note, thank you very much indeed, Bertrand Codon. Thank you.