We have done some estimates on the value of shippable goods under $80. Obviously, it's constrained to some degree by price at the top, by bulk, by weight, and so on. There are some things that fit under that threshold that would not fall into it, and by our estimate $55 billion's worth of goods fall into that category. It is not a minor category. It includes the bulk of apparel and a significant amount of consumer electronics. These are pretty significant areas, and they're very hotly contested areas at the retail level.
The implications of being able to operate at a tax advantage of 12.3% on average across the country are potentially devastating in that sector.
It is not the same thing as crossing the border periodically. We are looking at a situation in which you have a tax incentive from the comfort of your living room for pushing a button, and a very significant number of Canadians will take that opportunity and will choose to buy the tax-free option. That is going to affect the members in your ridings, the stores in your ridings, the workers in your ridings. We don't know with certainty what the sensitivity to that will be, but understand that it's $55 billion's worth of goods at risk, so any significant contraction in that is going to have a real impact at the ground level in your communities.