Thanks, Kody.
I want to build on that, as it turns out.
Without reading the entire paragraph, I note that paragraph 3.23 of the audit says that Canada was one of only two countries that were “relying on consumers to voluntarily declare that they owed taxes” and to mail them to the government. There were 35 countries that had simplified their registration systems.
In a previous career, I was bringing product in from Europe and reselling to the United States, because the United States just saw Europe as a really foreign country, whereas Canada was more aligned with the United States in some ways. We were importing and then exporting to the United States, and I found out that our courier company could do this and trap the data, and that we really didn't have to do much in changing our business systems to catch information on duty and taxes.
On the audit related to the taxes, I know the audit was on taxes, but on the data that comes through courier companies that includes duty information and could include even transfer cost prices to make sure that product wasn't getting dumped into our market, is that any related piece that we would benefit from if we went to a more streamlined digital trapping of this information?
This goes over to Mr. Ossowski for starters, and then possibly over to Mr. Rochon.