I'm happy you referred to the bicycle case. Earlier, I said on this subject that, in 2004, the European tribunals had used the price of Mexican bicycles sold in Mexico as a benchmark. They concluded that China was engaging in dumping and that it was necessary to assess a 22 percent duty. That anti-dumping duty is still in effect. If we had a similar policy, we'd already be enjoying a 22 percent tax on bikes.
Do you think that, without us copying that practice, some kind of criterion could lead us to understand that other countries aren't achieving market economies? In that case, the country's businesses might have less difficulty.