I suspect the bigger experts are sitting here in Hamilton. If I might reiterate, the model we're proposing as researchers is to make a better world in the future, where the medicines we invent now will be affordable. You're saying that the medicines now are very expensive and asking how we make the existing ones affordable.
It's harder, because we tacitly endorsed high pricing by all the things we put in place to do research. We allow the universities to patent. We think venture capital companies are the best thing ever. The consequence of that is high pricing. Other countries—Brazil, for example—nationalize the production of essential medicines and make them affordable to their people. I don't know if that's a model that would work here.
There are other ways, through public health, to tackle existing prices. We could also negotiate harder. Honestly, though, the pricing of medicines is decoupled from this research stuff we do, so I don't think I should speak too much about what I don't know.