I want to thank all of our guests for their testimony. It has all been very insightful. This is our fifth group of witnesses today. It has been intense, but it enables us to come right to the point and focus on priorities more than long meetings do.
I will start with Ms. St-Onge.
Among the figures you have shared with us regarding CBC/Radio-Canada, I was especially impressed by the fact that Canadians' annual contribution to our public broadcaster is about $29 per person, while the average contribution is about $83 or $84 in OECD countries.
CBC/radio-Canada is not PBS and should not become PBS, either. Correct me if I'm wrong, but most European countries and other OECD members feel that the role of public television is not only to ensure programming and diversity of news, but also to ensure that there is something for everyone in the available broadcast programming, which includes private television and radio. This is actually not a business requirement, but truly a quality requirement.
Could you comment on that comparison and give us your opinion on what CBC/Radio-Canada should be, in light of what its counterparts are in the countries that invest more?