Thank you for your question. I can be more specific if I answer in English.
With regard to the health transfer, I do not study Canadian public opinion, so I am not in a position to comment on what the median voter might perceive in terms of responsibility for various areas of spending. If this is of interest, I would suggest looking at some of the work done by colleagues of mine at the Chaire en fiscalité et en finances publiques in Quebec. They've done some very interesting work with regard to public understanding of taxes and transfers and areas of responsibility. I'm not in a position to cite from that work.
With regard to the Canadian health transfer specifically, which is the major transfer in public health in this country, I would note that it is an interesting example in terms of conditionality. While there are conditions, the process by which the federal government holds back any funds in cases of a suspected contravention of the Canada Health Act is quite rigorous. If anything, it's a nice model of federal-provincial co-operation in an area of—
