Those are excellent questions.
Certainly, postal banking around the world has been in a situation where the postal banks have competed with traditional private sector banks. In the case of Canada, it's not just the private sector; it's credit unions. If you take Quebec, I think 70% or more of the citizens of Quebec use credit unions as their primary banking source.
There would be competition with existing models, but I think that competition is justified because banks and credit unions, but particularly banks, have reneged on the services they're providing, particularly to rural Canada. You can just google any of the big banks and branch closures and you'll see what towns have been hit by the closure of branches in small-town Canada. It's a huge number on a regular basis. First of all, we need to challenge that, and postal banking is one of the ways of offering those kinds of services.
In the U.K.'s system, you can use your banking card with another bank to take out money at the post office. There are ways of accommodating someone who's a member of another bank, but it does offer a service that is extremely important, and I think we could deliver things.
Regarding the cost of that, in order to get the system running, we would temporarily have to borrow a small amount of money, but not a huge amount, because we already have an infrastructure. We don't have to buy buildings. We don't have to hire staff. We have to train staff and introduce programs slowly to make sure the services are accurate and are working well for the Canadians who would use them, but I think that would be repaid.
We've seen, in general, in terms of postal banking around the world, that it has been profitable. Because many people don't have access to other banking services, they would use those postal banking services. Right now, we've seen the form in which Canada Post was going to start off, which was a partnership with TD. They were going to work with TD to deliver some of the financial services through the post office.
There are different ways of doing it, and I think we can build that situation up to where we are able to offer postal banking services in a profitable manner. It's something that does not demand vast amounts of government money in terms of investment to do those things. We're in a new age of the Internet where a lot of these services can be delivered by trained personnel over the Internet, so it's not something where we have to figure out how we're going to deliver those services. We can teach somebody how to deliver a banking service over the Internet, and they can have contact with somebody in a central office.
We should be using, at the federal level, our trained banking experts in EDC, BDC, Farm Credit Canada, etc. We have this whole banking infrastructure in Canada, which is very large at the federal level and is owned by the federal government. It's not that we don't have anybody who knows what they're doing around banking services; we do.