We've come to a place in Canada around 4G networks where we have some of the best in the world. That's been based on the premise that if you put your money in the ground and invest in great networks where the payback is 10 years or more—in the case of wireless, it's 25 years—there's an opportunity to get return on that capital.
We have no aversion to reselling parts of our network on a wholesale basis to a provider that might come along with the value proposition as a whole. We take opposition to mandating that resale because, in that particular case, we then change the forward economics of the industry. It curtails our ability to invest in rural Canada. We are the ones who will end up investing in rural Canada; it won't be the resellers. We will have the balance sheet, the capability and the ambition to connect every Canadian or make 5G the focus across every corner of Canada.
Where there have been reseller markets across the globe, they've largely focused in highly, densely populated urban centres. Given the fact that prices have been coming down across all brands, the government's own telecom quarterly report said that prices have dropped 10% to 18% since January 2020.