I would say if you're going to buy a Tim Hortons franchise, you're going to pay. If you're going to buy a farm, you're also going to pay. Most intergenerational transfers happen with a son or a daughter; one will purchase the family farm. But if they have to borrow that money personally and pay the 52% tax.... It was, among the agricultural community members within the alliance, ranked the most important, and then it was unanimously passed, and then it went to the Canadian Federation of Agriculture. There it was unanimously passed as well. It was one of the most important strategic things that needed to change because, like the aging demographics in New Brunswick, we're also faced with the aging demographics of agriculture itself. I would say that, yes, it's a huge deterring factor.
In all fairness, compared to when I purchased the family farm, the transaction isn't a small amount anymore. When the tax laws were set up, family farms used to transfer for $200,000, $300,000, or $400,000. Now you're looking at a $2-million, $3-million, $4-million, $10-million transfer, so the impact has greatly changed.