No, I do not think that you got my meaning.
I can answer your question more accurately in English.
Certainly I recognize that social programs, health care, and education are areas of provincial jurisdiction. However, the fiscal imbalance came about because labour and capital are far more mobile between provinces than they are between countries. As a result of that, there's much more tax competition between provincial governments than what the federal government faces, and provincial governments aren't raising enough tax revenue to finance public services appropriately.
So if the federal government transfers money to provincial governments in an effort to solve the fiscal imbalance, and the provincial governments just cut their taxes, then we won't have addressed the problem, which ultimately was a lack of funding for provincial public services. I'm not calling on the federal government to micromanage all of these provincial programs; I'm just saying the federal government needs to have some minimum standards in place to ensure that these increased transfers are actually devoted to public services. For example, I think it's important to enforce the key principles of the Canada Health Act. I don't see that as a major infringement on provincial jurisdiction. In fact, I think it's very much in line with what the population of Quebec wants from its provincial government.