I would like to address what the parliamentary secretary mentioned as he's inserting himself into the committee's work, which I didn't think was normally the case.
The OECD investigation doesn't have the power to call witnesses and doesn't have the power to do an examination that a domestic parliamentary committee does. The OECD can examine, but it doesn't have the ability we have to actually examine the issues in a coherent and detailed fashion. Our report could be something the OECD then uses for their examination because they don't have any domestic powers of calling witnesses or anything like that.
I think if we're to support their efforts, we should conduct the study.