I think that's the subject of our entire hearing and your entire study. I think it's tremendously important to get to an A, and I trust this committee will find a way.
The brief answer to how New Zealand does a better job or Australia does a better job is that they purchase medicines following a negotiation, and our provinces in many cases do not. When prices are set, they're set by fiat, by some arbitrary percentage of the brand name price. You'll set a generic drug at 18% of the brand name price. Formerly in days past, that was 25% or 35% or 40%. The percentage keeps dropping, but it's always arbitrary. Eighteen per cent of the brand name price may be a great deal for one drug and it might be a blatant rip-off for another drug. Why would you do it this way? What Australia and New Zealand do is bargain, drug by drug.