Well, I can speak to it right now.
What are we seeing? If you look at corporate profits, as you indicated, particularly in the energy sector, with much higher global energy prices over the last year, we have seen higher profits in the energy sector. If you look at it more broadly, and this goes a bit to the previous question, what we have seen is that...and I would say that we have learned something from this. What we saw was that with the economy in excess demand, when there were cost pressures, businesses passed those through very quickly to final consumers, and this unfortunately is a symptom of an overheated economy.
When an economy is overheated, when inflation is high and when people see prices of everything going up, it makes it easier for companies to raise their prices, because people can't tell: Is this a generalized increase or is it just this company raising their price?
What we've seen is that, yes, the distribution of price-setting behaviour of companies changed. Price increases were bigger. They were more frequent.
We are starting to see it normalize, and that process of normalization is one of those key things we're watching to evaluate whether we have raised interest rates enough to get inflation back to target, and if we don't see it continue to normalize, we will need to do more.