Thank you.
I see at this time that Meta and Google receive over $1 billion per year in indirect subsidies. Canadians, through the Canada Revenue Agency, are subsidizing all the companies that want to advertise on Meta and Google. That is $1 billion a year.
These big tech companies could make a bit of a contribution. That is important.
I wanted to come to the issue of cellphones. Canadians are gouged mercilessly by big cellphone telecoms, and we have a market monopoly of over 90%.
Canadians pay among the highest prices in the world, often, as you cited in your introductory remarks, without the service that goes with it. Internet and cellphone fees in the midst of the affordability crisis that so many Canadian families are facing are a critical aspect of reducing the gouging that is going on when people go to the grocery store, when they go to the gas pumps or when they try to use their cellphone or have Internet access.
I note that one of the criticisms of the CRTC regime is that the CRTC regime places all of its bets on existing regionally bound competitors who have already demonstrably failed to provide sufficient price discipline and service innovation despite years of effort. As the Commission itself notes, the dominant providers exercise market power at a national level, allowing them to weather a substantial amount of competitive pressure in any particular region.
How do you respond to those criticisms that what the CRTC is putting in place simply will not address the affordability crisis that comes from the massive gouging by big telecom?