The current policy is that we want all Canadians to be able to access necessary prescription medications. You're asking about what we see as the actual funding model for that. We have recommended that there be a federal sharing of that cost and we've actually costed it out through a study with the Conference Board of Canada, looking at it from the point of view of no individual having to pay more than $1,500 a year or 3% of their annual earnings. That is one example we have proposed of what we're talking about as a shared model.
The remainder of the funding could come from private plans or from provincial plans. It's really just a demonstration of one model that could work and could be a step towards a universal federal plan. This would be something that could still happen in the future. We have suggested this model of a shared plan between the federal government and private or provincial plans because it is completely scalable. The question of how much this is going to cost, I know, is huge. It would be possible to set that limit at a lower amount or at a higher amount, whether it be $1,500 or $2,000 or $5,000. That is something the government could decide, along with the percentage—whether it's 3% of annual earnings or not. We really felt that it might be a way of initiating this type of federal involvement in payment with some safety parameters around it, such that you would have the ability to scale it up or down.