Yes.
Something that's coming out in all of this, which is being missed, is that there have been two events, the effects of which we could measure if we used individual tax returns. There's a longitudinal administrative data set through Statistics Canada that you could get private access to, so you guys could request that.
The first thing is the change in the treatment of publicly traded securities. You could actually look from year to year for individuals who used those types of deductions for their giving mechanisms, and you could understand better who was motivated by those changes.
The other big thing, more for the small or the bigger donor tax base, was the Haiti earthquake. If you remember, there was a big push put on regarding the government matching funds if people started giving. You could look at individual tax returns and ask who started giving to Haiti as a result.
There's potentially a lot of information you could gather to try to see whether a matching grant motivated people. That would help inform you whether doing something in terms of tax credits would be sufficient to motivate the donor base.