China is actually a good example, because they don't only subsidize their postal service, they practically render it free. If you go on aliexpress.com or alibaba.com and you choose something you want to buy, you click on it and you choose delivery to Canada. They will either charge you very little or they'll do free shipping. You get it in about four or five days. It's very quick. They fly it in and then Canada Post delivers it. It comes in pretty quickly, in Montreal, of course. Maybe in Nunavut it will take more time. But the point is you see on the package what's written, in terms of Hong Kong dollars, what they paid for it, and it's probably something equivalent to maybe, for a small parcel—I don't know what the exchange is—probably around three or four dollars, that type of thing. It's probably cheaper than what it would cost me to send something to my neighbour.
I believe all they're charging is the postal union fee, and the Communist government there is simply encouraging their exporters by putting it on a plane and sending it to Canada free. That's the extreme. I don't know how you can fight that. It's a form of subsidy, basically.