 For me, the Fundational Economy is helping us to go back to basics in the economy, and that means to return the economy to the people, to understand that everything that we do in our everyday life is influencing the economy, and it's part of the economy. So the economy is not only about the big investments and multinational firms and international capital flows, but it's also how we consume, how we work and what we do every day. So for me, the Fundational Economy has to help people to understand that it works this way. Well, it's supporting communities for me. So, of course, individual businesses must be embedded in their communities. So when you support a community, when you focus on their assets, when you focus on the opportunities they have, and when you focus on people, for me this is a Fundational Economy. So this is different from other approaches to local economies that we have been using for the past 40 years. So individual businesses are very important, but only a piece in this whole set of stakeholders and part of the community. People is happier if people can live better lives. We have ways to measure this, but we have to be more practical because actually when we have measures about this, they are not influencing policies or we don't know how to make policies to influence this. So we have to use a new set of indicators that combines income and combines what makes people in our society to live better, that is to have means to survive and to be consumers, etc. But we have to combine them with other foundational indicators related to quality of air, related to malnutrition and child obesity, and with energy poverty and with social housing availability. So these are the indicators that can show us if a local society is working or not.