I touched on this earlier. I think if we have programs, they have to be cash..... Let's say you're in the cash crop industry and it's a bad year, and say your subsidy money works out to $100 an acre; if you have 100 acres, that's $10,000. Well, there are some guys running 5,000 or 10,000 acres. All of a sudden they're getting $1 million from the government, and the young guy can't compete with that, because they'll tune their margins a bit more and say, next year we can get another couple of thousand because we know we're good. The young guy just can't get in, because they just outbid him. They outbid him for rent; they outbid him for the cost of land. I'm not too sure, but I think that's the limiting factor.
Personally, I have no family. When it's my turn to sell, if I have nephews who are interested in farming, they're going to get a deal. If they're not interested in farming and if there's a young kid in the neighbourhood, that kid is going to get a deal. I'm not going to necessarily sell to the highest bidder, because if I don't need the money and I don't like the guy, I'm not going to sell to him. But a lot of people are just going to go for the bucks. I don't blame them for that, either, but as I said, the young guy needs help—that's the only way it's going to work—and big help.