Any time there is cost introduced into the system, it makes it more expensive to travel. That's obviously not a good thing.
I will say that when we look at the global traveller across the world, almost every data point suggests they are planning to travel in the immediate future, notwithstanding rising costs. If you look back to the recession in 2008, in fact, travel was one of the few counterweights to other sectors that would typically see regression over that time period. We are fairly confident that travel is a really good investment. At this point, I think our focus is more on how we maximize that investment, because it seems at this point in time that people are planning to travel regardless of those rising costs. It's one of the few things they are not prepared to part from—maybe because it was taken away for two years—and so it's here to stay.
Our biggest fear, of course, is that Canada doesn't capitalize on our market potential, because we have labour policies that don't allow us to have hotel rooms open and have a functional tourism industry.