We have not done that kind of analysis because our industry is very unique. There are a lot of other industries that are interested in regulatory coherence and harmonization that have one or two major issues; whereas, by definition, our members sell hundreds of thousands of products, so the impact is very large. To do that kind of analysis would involve having to work across a number of industries.
What we have done is taken a few examples in order to focus on specific product areas. One example would be child car seats on which we're working towards harmonizing requirements in the U.S. Technically right now, if you were to purchase a car seat in the U.S., because of small technical differences, it wouldn't meet Canadian requirements. That sort of thing has an impact on trade, and for Canadian consumers it has an impact on consumer choice—the latest and greatest models and that sort of thing—and ultimately on price because of differences in design and having to do different tests.
No, we have not done that global analysis because for our industry it involves hundreds of thousands of products.