 It's been a real pleasure to be here at the UPU's first trade post forum and to have the focus on MSMEs and women entrepreneurs and how we can bring them deeper into the economy because they're really the engines of growth going forward. They're the engines of job creation, of innovation and of dealing with inequalities. So I think we have to find a way for the postal system and the postal service to work for small businesses and for women entrepreneurs. The first thing is to change the image of the post office. It is a modern place that can facilitate the trade of goods and services for small and medium-sized enterprises. It can be a hub, an internet hub, a facility hub, a way for small businesses to be able to store their goods, for example, for them to be able to learn from each other, for them to be able to have training, technical assistance, capacity building through partnerships between the post office and other organizations, including standards bodies and other board agencies. I think the post office for the 21st century has got to really work to bring MSMEs and women entrepreneurs closer to where they can easily and cost-effectively trade. You know, digital is the future. We saw this during the pandemic that those small businesses that were able to very quickly pivot online and sell their goods online were those that survived. So we have got to give small businesses the capacity to trade via e-commerce systems to be able to market their goods via e-commerce platforms and to be able to manage the inventory issues that they will have to manage as well. So I think that there is a real need, an economic need, a developmental need for governments, international organizations and importantly the private sector to work together to make sure that there is an ecosystem of MSMEs that are able to get onto the e-commerce highway and use digital tools to be able to improve the way that they market and improve the reach of their goods and services.