I think the issue is that in a deregulated environment certain farmers who are close to domestic markets or who have particular qualities of grain may be able to get a better premium or a better price than the collective.
The system that we have in western Canada of a single-desk system is one where all of the grain is sold together, and we hope to attract overall value associated with that. The criticism of this is that people can't price their own grain. What the Wheat Board attempts to do is allow farmers to price their grain basically emulating the futures markets.But I think you have to recognize that that isn't the same as their going and trying to make a deal themselves. By making a deal themselves, of course, there would be all those other farmers trying to make the same sort of deal.