Certainly.
It's important that Canada and the Canadian provinces maintain a competitive tax regime. When we're looking at the United States and other competing governments with which we compete for work and workers, we see that Canada right now, in its tax regime, is reasonably competitive in terms of general levels. There are some inefficiencies and some taxes that are more productive than others. Taxes on capital and that sort of thing are regressive taxes that discourage investment, but things like the consumption taxes we have make sense. The government needs to collect taxes to be able to deliver programs. We fully support that. We don't see that Canada has a substantial problem with regard to its taxes. We have to keep reviewing it and looking at it when comparing our rates and our structure to those of our competitors to ensure that we maintain our competitiveness. Right now, the bigger issue for us is that we're spending more than we're bringing in. We need to solve that from the perspective of our spending and not with taxes.