Again, this is the first time we've seen these numbers. I would have to look through the numbers, but I don't believe the studies we've done show any tax leakage, so I don't believe we would see a compounding. You also have to take into account the present value of the dollars today. But according to the numbers we've seen and the numbers we've run looking at true, real, practical taxes paid by corporations versus the trusts, there is not a leakage issue here. We have not come across that in any of our studies. We've looked at 126 business trusts, and we compared the taxes paid in the prior one, two, and three years before conversion, and then looked at the taxes paid, through the distributions, by the unitholders in the first year following conversion, and that number was almost two times the difference.
You can massage the assumptions, but the reality is that all of these are based on theoretical studies looking at, as George mentioned, statutory tax rates. Corporations have 600 pages of tax code on deductions. I don't believe it was ever predicted that BCE would restructure their subsidiaries and accelerate R and D credits. Was that factored into these assumptions? Corporations have many avenues available to them that ordinary common unitholders do not have. Using that as the basis for our assumptions, we have not determined, through our studies, that there is any leakage