It is, for a number of reasons.
First, the basic 15% credit, which is non-refundable, doesn't do much for a company that is pre-revenue. About 75% of the companies on the TSX Venture Exchange, which is our junior market, are effectively pre-revenue. When you're talking about incentivizing investment in research and development to a company that's not paying income tax because they're just not that big yet, the benefit of the basic credit, which public companies are eligible for, just really isn't there.
The second thing is that it's about a level playing field. Whether you're a company, an entrepreneur who's elected to raise capital on our markets already, or you're thinking about it, there are lots of reasons why you would or would not go public, but the more roadblocks we can remove and the smoother we can make that decision-making process, the easier it is for the entrepreneurs to make those decisions to access capital and to focus on the things that we all want them to, which is creating jobs, creating IP, growing and contributing to the economy.