Yes. I'm very happy to expand on that. That's precisely the issue. What we've seen is that these are areas of jurisdiction, particularly health care, that in the Constitution were outlined as areas of responsibility for the provinces. The provinces, obviously, are doing a lot of the spending and the management of delivery, while the federal government is sending billions of dollars to provincial governments every year.
The issue that you see when that occurs is a lack of accountability. If the state of hospitals within a province is unacceptable, if we're unhappy with what's going on in long-term care or if we're unhappy with the delivery of health care, the provincial government can simply turn around and say, “We don't have enough funding from Ottawa”, so ultimately it's Ottawa's fault and not the province's fault.
What you would do by transferring tax points is let the level of government that is constitutionally responsible for delivering these services deliver and fund them, and then you can hold the appropriate level of government accountable when they fail to do so. This simply allows for politicians at different levels to blame each other without achieving the proper results.