Thank you.
You mentioned a couple of times, in your opening statement and in the first question, consumer expectations relating to when you're standing in front of.... I get to stand in front of Barbies, and I'm choosing Barbies, right? So it depends on what the e-mail was and how my daughters talk to me. We've had my colleague over here talk about a frying pan that's going to kill birds. Consumers want to be able to buy products they're confident about. I don't think most people stand in front of a display and wonder how much cadmium is in this children's jewellery, or if my frying pan is going kill a bird, which I still find interesting.
We know there are products out there and we know that something has happened, that cadmium or whatever is out there. We've heard that when a recall goes out, we're only getting about 10% to 15% of those products back--recovered, I think is the proper way of saying that. Have you considered including a mechanism to help increase those rates, and would you support looking at the inclusion of such a mechanism?