Right now, home Internet services are really dictated for competitors and for retail by the wholesale rates that incumbents have set. By inflating those wholesale rates—which really goes back all the way to 2011 probably, or earlier, when those rates were first set—they have really prevented competitors from being able to introduce pricing that would discipline Internet pricing across the board.
You can just look at what the CRTC's current wholesale rates are for specific services that you buy. You can look at what the CRTC found would be a just and reasonable rate for that service in August 2019, and those are the rates that incumbents are fighting. If you do look that up, you'll see specific prices that are lower than the pricing that's in the market. Of course, it's more complicated than just the individual speeds, but it will give you an idea of the disparity between the inflated rates and the just and reasonable price that it ought to be.