That makes sense. It just helps me because I knew about the heating and I knew about the gas price, and now it makes sense that even food will be affected—I might buy locally produced food, and that might be different from buying something that comes in from South Africa or New Zealand. It all depends on the products and how they're actually brought in. That makes sense.
I want to go back to something Mr. Warawa mentioned. I think you were going through a bit of an example around how low-income people might get more money back than they've actually paid out. My understanding is that Mr. Warawa made some sort of reference that the government shouldn't go into a deficit to be able to zero in on this. My understanding is that this is not at all what's going to be happening. Maybe you can explain a bit more about how that is the case.
I think it has to do with how, if you look at the overall pool of what comes in, it includes businesses and large polluters that come back into the pool, and that's how we can actually move more money back into low-income earners.
I just wanted to see if you could maybe elaborate on that.