That is a terrific question. It is central. The short answer is, no we don't have the capacity to be able to fix data quality—certainly not specifically in Canada. This is a universal problem. Every jurisdiction and economy has to deal with it, and is dealing with it. As for what you can do about it, we sponsored this paper and continue to sponsor other work in this area to try to improve data quality. I'd have to go back to the authors on the specific cost that was cited in the paper, but there is no doubt that poor data quality already is a problem and that as we move increasingly into a more digital future, the importance of data quality is only going to increase exponentially.
This is also one of the reasons we've included that concern about data quality if we move forward, potentially, with an agency in this area.