I think it is curious. I think the number one problem of the business sector these days is conserving enough cash so that they can survive until we traverse this unusual disruption. I don't think it's just the carbon tax. I don't know why we would be collecting the GST. We're dividing a lot of schemes in which we get money from the federal government to businesses so they can stay afloat. Probably the easiest way to do that would be to stop collecting money from the private sector and transferring it to the government. That would be the quickest way of getting money and keeping money in the hands of the private sector so it could survive. I think there was an opportunity missed there. For the carbon sector, the industrial impact is, of course, going to be felt most severely in the oil and gas sector, which is dealing with two crises simultaneously: one, record low price, and the other, the general disruption of economic activity. It is that sector in particular that is amongst the most vulnerable.
But there are also a lot of service industries whose business operations are being completely disrupted. Hotels and restaurants are not being affected by this tax but they are also being severely affected. As I mentioned, when you start to think of the line that's going to be forming for help from the federal government, the demands on the federal government in the next few months are going to be simply gargantuan. I don't know how they're going to sort all of this out.