The price band is another aspect of the Colombian import system that operates not all the time but at certain times when prices go below a certain threshold or above a certain level.
For one, if we assume that cereal prices will be higher in the foreseeable future than what they were in, say, the 1980s and 1990s, as I think most people would agree because of the biofuel reality, then we'll see less likelihood of the lower level of the price band being triggered, which is what has limited imports at certain times into Colombia. However, what the Canadians negotiated in the agreement for pork, for the elimination over 13 years of the over-quota tariffs, will provide an adjustment over time where the Colombian price and the world price will be less different.
The prices won't be the same. In Australia, for example, where they have free trade agreements with the U.S. and essentially free trade with us in several respects, they still enjoy a very high price level internally relative to the world market.
So it doesn't necessarily collapse the domestic price, but it will cause them to converge to a greater extent. The price band will be much less of a constraint for us than it has been in the past if the Canada-Colombia deal is put into effect.