Thank you.
Next, this is not so much to say that it's being done in that very intentional way that we saw in Bolivia, or that my teacher was talking about, but I think for me it raises this question: What is the role of government and the public sector to try to set up a system that reclaims food waste and makes it available for folks, when we know that the people who are doing it for profit want to sell those really beautiful tomatoes at a high price in order to make a margin and might be concerned that, over time, if the ugly tomatoes are out there and people are buying them at a cheaper price, people won't be coming into their grocery stores to buy those better-looking and more expensive tomatoes?
What role does the public sector have to play in establishing that secondary market instead of leaving it to those who benefit from the primary market?