I said earlier that I am in favour of the statutory law, for the reasons I suggested earlier. I share exactly the same concerns you do. Canada needs to take a careful look at the United States and learn from some of the errors. The inequality problems in the United States are really serious and each of them is earned by us. It has to do with policy and each of the things you're talking about contributes to these problems.
One thing I'll say about antitrust is that a predictable consequence of allowing an extreme concentration of industries is that they have increased political power of the kind you are talking about. These are small groups, which are very organized, that understand the payoffs from investing in legislation. In the United States, for example, the pharmaceutical industry invested $117 million in lobbying to prevent drug prices from going down. That has benefited them to the tune of $70 billion a year. The concentrated groups understand this. Failing to enforce the antitrust laws and allowing industries to over-concentrate will lead to stronger political pressure on people like the people in this room.