First of all, you used the word “disproportionate”. We spend a lot of time worrying about the consumer price index, obviously. We are probably Statistics Canada's most avid critic--in the good sense of the word--of what they do. We think our consumer price index in Canada is certainly among the best in the world, probably better than consumer price indices almost everywhere else in terms of its representativeness.
When the prices of products you purchase regularly move up, it always seems that's what is really going on. The most regular purchase, and the one everybody knows, is the price of gasoline. Even if you don't purchase it, you pass the signs on your way to work every day. And everybody knows the price of basic foods, because you're buying bread, milk, eggs, and so on every week. So you are highly aware of what's happening in those movements. It is absolutely true that gasoline and fuel prices have been going up very much more rapidly, so you think the whole index is moving more rapidly. With the rise in the price of grains recently--and that feeds fairly rapidly through to dairy products, chicken and so on--you see that. So on these frequently bought items, you think Stats Can must be wrong, but--