Well, I think you may be quoting from the Mowat report, actually authored by professors Tremblay and Boadway, but I was on the same panel and I agree with what they wrote. I came to believe in this fundamental reform, what's called a rent-based tax, but I'm not necessarily advocating any particular approach here today. I'm suggesting that this is an important thing the government needs to look very carefully at in an independent fashion. This would be more of a medium-term reform, whether it ends up as a rent-based tax, or some other base-broadening effort like the Tax Reform Act of 1986 in the U.S., or the 1987 approach here in Canada. I think we can bring the level of complexity down.
One of the problems, even if one moves away from corporate tax—and I think we've at least referenced this host of credits, for instance, for low-income Canadians; I can't recall them all: child tax credit, universal child tax credit benefit, the working income tax benefit, and there are at least a few others. Most people who toil in this area as researchers would say that's not necessarily helpful to low-income Canadians. It's extremely complex how it works in our province, with Ontario Works and so on. That could be simplified, and again, to help—