Bill C-64, except for diabetes medication and contraception, does not create a single-payer system. We don't know what the national pharmacare system is going to look like at the moment. It won't necessarily by the sounds of it be a single-payer system.
However, Ms. Eagan, in response to the idea of a single-payer system, you said this was wasteful because all Canadians would have to pay for it with taxes—which is true—but that, right now, many Canadians get it as a benefit from their employer.
It's not like that's free. That's part of your pay. You get paid a certain amount of money, but you get some benefits. It's a cost to the employer, and if the employer doesn't have to pay that cost presumably you would get more in your salary. If the government can have a system that is cheaper to run—and there is some indication that with a government-run system, a non-profit system, because of economies of scale, government could provide that system more cheaply than the employer could—that would be a net benefit to Canadians.
Would that not be the case?