Thanks, Joël.
I'll stay with Professor Quaid.
You just articulated the need to be on the same page internationally, yet you expressed some skepticism about the wage-fixing rule. However, the wage-fixing rule would bring us in harmony in a more serious way with our American allies, for example. When we experienced the reduction of wages of employees at grocery stores in the middle of a pandemic, if that had happened in the United States, their competition commissioner would have had a lot more to say than our competition commissioner was able to say. That's because of the nature of their law versus the nature of our lacking civil remedy, I would say.
How do you square the need for harmonization and then say you struggle with this kind of harmonization?