In Canada, there are a couple of things that we've done. We obviously have in place a BRM suite. The minister went through that, including AgriStability, which has what I would call a counter-cyclical aspect, in the sense that if it's a difficult year, payments would go up. It's kind of a safety net. It's akin to employment insurance in the sense that if it's a worse year, it will respond naturally. We would expect that to happen in a difficult year.
The U.S. programming suite is a bit different. Obviously, they have some ad hoc programs, but not the level of base BRM support that Canada has.