Sure.
First of all, I think there's a question about the size of many of these operations. I know it's nice to have the image of the family farm and a family maintaining a few head of cattle, and living a sort of idyllic life.
In reality, as I understand it at any rate, a large number of the quotas in the agricultural field are held by fairly large concerns, and they're exceptionally valuable. I do recognize the value of these quotas; people have invested in those, and they've planned their lives around an expectation that those quotas will yield them a certain amount of product that they can sell.
We do have to find a way of resolving that issue for those people who have invested or who have inherited an expectation attached to a quota. Yes, probably we're going to have to buy them out in one form or another. That's only fair. But I would also suggest that in the other countries where this issue has been addressed, the whole industry becomes that much more profitable. And I use “industry” advisedly, because maybe when I say industry we don't have the same image as the family farm, but it is an industry. It's just a micro-industry.
The agricultural industries where supply management has been abolished in other countries have often done very well. Try going down to the supermarket and looking for a chunk of lamb. Almost for darn sure it's going to say New Zealand on it. Why is that? That's because they have successfully modernized not only their agricultural industry itself, but their marketing capacity.