Yes, I think there's obviously a huge range of factors, some of which we're hearing about, that go into SME competitiveness. I think I would put it in a narrower way, which is that competition policy, competition law, is about levelling the playing field across all kinds of competitors. We want entrants to be able to enter the market as freely as the fundamental economics will permit, and to be innovative and aggressive on pricing, all for the betterment of society as a whole. We're better off economically when there are competitive markets, not uncompetitive markets.
Where competition law, I think, is correctly calibrated is to protect SMEs, and other kinds of competitors frankly too, from practices that seek to limit competition. I used the example of those exclusive contracts where you're basically just trying to use exclusive contracts to make it impossible for other people to compete with you. That is not having a better product and that is not having a lower price. That's just trying to use a contractual tool—