I think the starting point for the CFA has always been that any code of conduct must be mandatory and enforceable. I think that can mean different things in different situations. There's not a prescriptive approach to what that necessarily looks like in practice. However, I think that the government has a critical role in ensuring that it meets that threshold. I think that when we start from the space of looking at large retailer practices, it's ensuring that large retailers are under that code and are following and abiding by its rules.
Without getting into the details of the code itself, I think from our perspective what's critical is that there's accountability to the trade provisions that are laid out in the code of conduct and to ensuring that there are sufficient teeth and enforceability to ensure that those provisions are being followed. From the perspective of government, how active a role it has to take is really a matter of reality once we see a code of conduct in practice and what that looks like.
It's to be determined what the mechanism may be, but I think, from a fundamental starting point, it's ensuring that all of the key players are in the code and abiding by its rules and that there's accountability to those rules.