Chair, two different studies have been out there in the cannabis space recently, with Deloitte showing that the sector contributes $45 billion in GDP. More recently, we put out the first phase of an EY study that shows that the governmental collective appetite for taxes is coming in at the 25% to 40% range. Tax on cannabis was characterized first as at 10%, $1 in $10, but the floor has fallen out on the $10, and it's $3.50 or whatever, but the tax ratio has only grown as we've seen price de-escalation.
Cannabis, especially the dry flower, becomes like a commodity. The commodity was projected to be $10 per gram, with $1 of that as tax. We now have a commodity that's often $3.50 per gram, and the tax is still $1, so the proportionate aspect is out of control.
The inflationary piece that you mentioned, Mr. Member of Parliament, I need to check on, because I'm not sure it applies to us in the same way that it does to beer and other excises, but I may be wrong. You'll forgive me for taking a moment to go back and get my facts straight. I'll send information along to all members of the committee related to the EY report that focused in a lot on this overall tax bite, which is making it very difficult for all sizes of growers.