The role of the commissioner as an advocate for competition is important, but I think it's important to recognize as well that we have decided in Canada that the Competition Bureau is really primarily an enforcement agency. For example, we would have had, at a certain point, the choice of looking at competition law in Canada as a way of protecting low prices for consumers, but that's not what we've said. We have said that under the Competition Act there's absolutely nothing wrong with attaining market power through having a better product or innovation. And if it puts you in a position of being able to charge higher prices than might otherwise exist, there's nothing wrong with that, as long as you have not abused your dominant position.
So we have decided in Canada that the Competition Bureau and the Commissioner of Competition protect consumers and competitors and competition from behaviour in the market that is anti-competitive. We do not regulate the market in Canada to keep prices low. That is not the role of the Competition Bureau. So when we think of the Commissioner of Competition as being an advocate for competition, it has to be with our having in mind that the enforcement powers of the Competition Bureau are not part of that advocacy role. The enforcement powers of the Competition Bureau are directed towards preventing and dealing with anti-competitive behaviour in the market.