Yes. Yes, I think so, simply put, and I think that in light of the review, there are some opportunities for us to rethink specifically how we plan to use the act to accomplish that.
Coming back to the study I spoke about, which I and some colleagues did for ISED, one of the themes that came up again and again was how specifically the act evaluates anti-competitive conduct and whether this method for determining whether conduct is anti-competitive or not is actually tractable in our modern economy, where a lot of the effects of the anti-competitive behaviour that's happening today actually manifest many years from now.
It's not realistic for regulators to be able to summon the future in a crystal ball. Because of that, we need to be rethinking the core fundamentals of how the law works and how it's applied today, and that ties specifically to substantive tests—again, these methods by which officers at the Competition Bureau actually identify and determine whether certain behaviour is anti-competitive under the law.