As you point out—and I raised this, actually, in my opening statement—the CPI is a basket of goods that reflects what the representative household buys usually. Obviously, right now we're in a very unusual situation, so we're not buying many of the things that we normally buy. We're not travelling. We're not driving our cars as much. What we are buying is more food. We're at home more. We're buying more home goods and things like that.
Yes, the standard measures of inflation do not capture the reality that most Canadians are facing. We are working with StatsCan to get some measures of inflation that are more representative of what Canadians are really experiencing.
Keep in mind, though, that a lot of these effects will be fairly temporary. The economy is beginning to reopen. Essential stores have been open. Non-essential stores and services are beginning to reopen. People are probably going to go back and start shopping. Their basket will probably get more back to normal, but there may be some long-lasting effects, and it's going to be very important that we understand those.