I spoke about the purpose statement of the Competition Act is because I think that this is actually one of the most critical aspects. I think it's less critical from that legal perspective. The legal importance of the purpose statement is not that critical. What's most important is setting a purpose statement that orients the conversation in a way that is productive and that brings in all stakeholders. That includes big business, small business and all these other stakeholders that I mentioned.
I think the second most important thing is something I've already talked about here too. It's rethinking how we actually evaluate and identify anti-competitive conduct because, again, our economy's changing, and, unlike in the past, I think we're faced with more problems of having to predict what behaviours today are going to do and the implications of them in the future. There are limits to that. Perhaps taking a more rules-based approach, while it may be a more blunt instrument, can actually help us prevent some of these anti-competitive problems before they get a bit out of control.