This relates to your first question. The time when producers have the highest percentage of Canadian retail revenues is when there is the maximum demand for our products worldwide. In 2002 we had a much higher percentage for producers in the Canadian retail, because we exported 60% of our product outside of Canada, and 20% of our product was actually exported outside of North America. That means the world has the capacity to compete for every muscle and every cut with every player in Canada. That competitive environment put more dollars into the pockets of producers. Trade is a major determinant of that.
When you can't trade, throughput goes down, fixed costs have to be paid, variable costs go up, distribution costs per unit of production go up, and there's less money to go around to all pockets. That just doesn't work for us as an industry. It doesn't work for consumers either.