I know that the former health minister and current interim leader of the Conservative Party made that statement. I believe that the current health minister has made similar ones.
To the extent that there is price gouging, whether it's the PMPRB, or the pCPA, or the provincial drug plan managers, they need to take action. They have the power to do so, and they should act on it. We don't advise clients to charge excessive prices. We advise them to follow the rules. Some don't always take our advice.
It's not our advice that they should be gouging. We explain how the common drug review and the rest of them work. They want cost-effective pricing, cost-effective in the Canadian context, and the provinces are concerned about their budget impact. Those are the parameters that we bring to the table. We help to explain those to them so that they hopefully will set prices that are cost effective. If they're not, well, presumably the PMPRB, the pCPA, or the provinces will take appropriate action.