First of all, there are a couple of areas that I think one should pay some attention to. One is with respect to the sectors themselves. It's particularly important on the energy side, but I don't want to get into the view of picking one industry over another. You have to remember that some of the other commodity price-sensitive industries, such as mining and forestry, are also taking a significant hit right now.
On the other hand, agriculture is actually holding up quite well with good pricing, so they're not facing the same kinds of issues, although there are some other issues that have to be dealt with in respect to supporting agricultural food production, which is so critical to fill up all those shelves. We have to remember that there's a whole supply chain involved here, including the truckers and many other people who are involved.
As a result, there are two major strains that are involved—energy, of course, being the worse one with the major reduction in prices, which is going to take more than the COVID response. I think the government is going to have to be sensitive to the fact that there are going to be some industries that are going to take longer to come out of this. Energy will be one of them, and there may be some other ones too. Therefore, they are going to need to think of a package that's not going to be one size fits all sectors, but that may have to take into account the fact that some sectors may have a longer period, especially if they're sensitive to pricing that's impacted by inventory accumulation that will go along for a while.
The other issue, of course, on the energy side particularly, but also some others that one could talk about is that not all of the farms, for example, going into this crisis were in good shape. Some were fine. In principle, support for farms has to be provided in such a way that those farms that have good strength will be able to continue, but not in such a way as to try to keep bad farms operating.
That doesn't apply only to the energy sector. That could apply to others, including aerospace and others that may have been challenged at a point before even coming into this problem.
The other issue, I think, that needs to be dealt with is provincial government support for some of the provinces where there's been a huge drop in the revenues. I think the federal government should move very quickly on fixing the stabilization program, which has a cap of $200 per taxpayer and excludes royalties and has a number of other aspects to it. This would have been particularly important for Newfoundland, but also for some of the other commodity-based provinces that are getting very strongly hit in terms of their revenues right now, and yet, we have a program that is really not at all very sensitive, I think, to some of these changes.
It is particularly important for those commodity-based provinces that do not receive any equalization payments. Newfoundland is a good example.