Right. There's a different approach there. In Canada and some other markets—France would be another one—sometimes there are what we call price-volume agreements, where they actually negotiate prices drug by drug. In the U.K. and New Zealand, they set budgets, and if there isn't any more room in the budget, they don't list the new drug.
In England, it's a little trickier because they have all these clinical commissioning groups, each one with its own budget. They have to find the money to start paying for new drugs. They use budgeting, as opposed to this overall price negotiation. That's not to say that they don't have one-off negotiations for some new drugs, but they don't do it overall. It's primarily budget-setting that keeps the costs lower in those markets.