If memory serves, it was based on a methodology used by a sister organization in the U.S., called ICER, where you basically look at how much we're spending on pharmaceuticals in a given year, how much GDP is increasing, the percentage of GDP increase, and multiply the percentage by the total spend on pharmaceuticals. That gives you some idea of what your budget envelope is to accommodate new drugs coming onto the market. Then you divide by the average number of drugs that are coming onto the market over a period of some years. Typically, it's around 35 new drugs per year. That gives you about a $6-million envelope for any new drugs, and then—
On November 27th, 2020. See this statement in context.