I think that's a fair observation.
When we produce the consumer price index, we're after the measurement of the same basket of goods over a period of time. When you look at telecommunication service, you look at a package that has so much data, so much voice, so much time and so many characteristics [Technical difficulty—Editor] time.
For sure, when I open my telecommunications bill, I'm not opening it and saying, “Wow, this is great. I'm paying less.” There's a difference between what households are spending on things and what the price change is and what the CPI does.
The CPI is really that quality-controlled basket of goods that we compare over a period. That is not to say that Canadians aren't hurting. They're paying a lot, not just for telecommunications services but also for housing, as well as for food and a range of other commodities.