—was defined in a specific way so that the terms and conditions and the business practices would remain substantially the same. What has occurred over time is that drug development has evolved dramatically. It's much more international than it used to be and much more focused on international clinical trials.
The PMPRB still records R and D spending based on the same 1986 premise, but what has happened is that the tools for investment, infrastructure, etc., that were going forward have been reduced over the course of time. What has gone up significantly are investments in international clinical trials and, as I mentioned in my previous answer, we have over 9,000 trials going at any given time. If those trials are sourced out of Canada as the original research, even though Canadian sites are involved, none of the money spent, literally the hundreds of millions of dollars spent on that, gets counted or credited to our members for R and D that actually is occurring in Canada.