We looked at inflation after the United Kingdom's code of conduct came into force and compared it to inflation from 2012 to 2020, before the pandemic, because that changed a lot of things. Inflation in countries with a code of conduct was somewhat lower than in Canada. It proves that a code of conduct doesn't increase prices. As I was saying in my presentation, it increased the supply chain's efficiency and operation. The best proof is that retailers in the United Kingdom support the code of conduct.
I also referred earlier to a broad study led by the United Kingdom's competition authority in 2008, I think, which recommended this type of action. The authority also stated that maintaining the status quo would lead to consumers paying the price in the end. It's thanks to that study the United Kingdom put a code of conduct in place.