 The leaders continue to be a stable group. We have again Switzerland as number one for the sixth year in a row, followed by Sweden, the UK, the USA, Finland and Singapore. There are eight European countries in the top ten, which is also remarkable. There are good news in all regions. That is, we find firm leaders if we take any region of the world. Let's say, for instance, in Sub-Saharan Africa, we have Mauritius, we have South Africa and we have Kenya leading the pack. If we move to Latin America and the Caribbean, we have Chile, we have Costa Rica and we have Mexico. At the top in the Central and Southern Asian region, we have India, we have Kazakhstan and we have Iran. And if we look at Southeast Asia, East Asia and Oceania, we have in the leading position Singapore, Korea and Hong Kong. So each of the region has its own leaders. The fact that we have typically rich countries in the top ten or even in the top 25 leads us to think that in these there is a remaining divide. Yet, we see that innovation is becoming more global, which is why we chose the theme of this year's report, winning through global innovation in two ways. On one hand, we have more emerging economies that are actually becoming leaders. And on the other hand, we have an innovation which by nature is more cross-border, involves more cooperation between countries. If we just look at the first dimension of globalization, indeed the fact that China for the first time shows that a middle-income country can break into the group of the top 25 is just a harbinger for more of the same. We are going to see other countries moving up the ladder of innovation. It is clear that we are still in times of low growth and that global growth will not pick up very rapidly. That's one first message, even if growth remains low, investment in R&D expenses on innovation should not diminish. The second message is that quality matters. We've been given increasing importance in GII to the notion of innovation quality. And we see that countries like China, India and even Brazil continue to improve on that score and that's an important message. And last but not least, innovation success is largely a result of good innovation policies. So the leadership that can be shown by governments, the evolution of regulatory environments to support innovation are born to bear fruit. If we look just as an example to the GCC countries, with the leaders like the United Arab Emirates or Qatar, we see that the will of the government, the demonstrative effect of public sector projects, has been playing a very significant role in leading innovation and creating a true local innovation culture.