It's somewhat difficult to measure because of the scale of the economics, the scale of populations. There's no doubt that two of our most important partners, the U.S. Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission, are enormously well resourced. We all know that. We are certainly part of the conversation and work collaboratively with them in several law enforcement partnerships that we are engaged in across Canada and internationally.
On the consumer protection side, we have the International Consumer Protection and Enforcement Network. Within that group, which is well over 40 countries, New Zealand, Australia, the Federal Trade Commission, the U.K., and us are considered the big five. We're the ones that collaborate. We're the trailblazers. We're the ones that are more likely to work collaboratively to address such global scourges as subscription traps.
On the criminal side of our law, with cartels—at the Competition Bureau, for example, with bid-rigging—our partner, the U.S. DOJ, is enormously resourced. There's a lot of collaboration there. Could we do more with more resources? As we always say, as a law enforcement agency, most certainly we could.