Again, the intention of the recommendation is to make sure that it's possible to determine whether that full subsidy is showing up in that final price. As we explain in the audit, a number of different factors go into that. We feel it's not sufficient simply to say that this is the landed cost of a product, this is the subsidy amount, so therefore all the subsidy is getting passed on to the consumer, because more factors go into that pricing before it gets to the consumer.
I think it ends up being a certain reality when a government is involved in this type of a market and is doing something that affects final prices. Because of that decision to do something to affect the final prices, the government has to have the way of making sure it knows whether it's having the impact it intended to have or not. The fact that the program exists means there has to be a good way of determining whether the program is in fact doing what it was intended to do.