Merci.
I'd like to take it back and look at what we've heard so far in committee, both this morning and in other instances.
Prior to 1996 we had an evolving industry. The ATM industry had evolving service out there. We had a collective monopoly in the large financial institutions. The bank owned and controlled the Interac service, kept other people out by having huge or very high membership fees, and didn't permit people to charge convenience fees. Private sector operators who didn't have the full service, who wouldn't have been in the banking service, couldn't have access, couldn't compete, couldn't get in. So we did have a joint monopoly, or a collective monopoly.
With the decision of the board in 1996 lowering those membership fees, or permitting access to competitors through the Interac network, permitting convenience fees, we've had the evolution that we've seen now, where we have a variety of fees charged--from $3 to zero in most cases, depending on where you are--and a lot of choice, a lot of points of access.
I look at that evolution and say, if Parliament gets involved and all of a sudden we start regulating fees--or eliminating fees, as the NDP is suggesting--I would surmise that the risk is that we would reduce service, that we would reduce choice, and that we would reduce the points of service.
Do any of you disagree with that point?