With regard to CETA, without blowing the whole system up and taking manufacturers completely out of the equation—let's just say that we stay where we are at the moment—we could at least be going back to a set of rules that we consider to be fair and equitable.
You had a set of rules with regard to large and small pools. They're moving around due to unintended consequences. I think we we really need to go back to where the spirit of it was at the very beginning and to make it transparent. For a company like mine, if you know that the threshold's around a million kilograms, you make the decision as a business owner. It's in your hands whether you're going to sell more and then lose that quota—that's up to you—or stay below that, not sell as much, maybe charge a bit more, make more money and have that quota for yourself. That's what I would say.
Right now, my business is in the hands of Global Affairs. Somehow it doesn't make sense. It's never a good thing when the Government of Canada is running your business.
As far as the other categories are concerned, I think you have to adopt something similar to what you did with CETA, if that's the way we want to keep this. In that scenario there's a split, a share, between distributors and manufacturers, if indeed that's the road we want to go down. Right now it's very heavily advantaged towards the manufacturers, as I pointed out before.