It's a great question, Mr. Barlow. It's difficult; I can't really comment on the administration costs. I can only imagine how expensive and complicated it would be. Again, I don't have any experience in that area.
Focusing on your question about the impact on farmers or price impact, what we're worried about is that if this goes ahead and it's a blanket approach, there will be winners and there will be losers. I believe farmers will ultimately end up losing on the imports of critical inputs like fertilizer, machinery and crop protection products. We import a lot of those products. If those products have taxes attached to them, our input costs go up, our margins collapse and we go from bad to worse.
We already have the China issue right now. That's a big problem for us. The last thing farmers need is more uncertainty about the cost and availability of their inputs. We don't know the details, and the devil is in the details. Proceed on this with caution. Think of all of the circumstances of the winners and the losers. This is very risky, in our view.
Again, it's hard to comment on theoreticals right now, but where the rubber hits the road, we'll be able to answer that question more thoroughly.