Yes, absolutely. In our university network, concentration has a direct impact on our institutions' developmental capacity, on their ability to attract graduate students and, as a result, on funding for their operations budgets. Indeed, a large part of the funding used for university operations is contingent on student numbers.
As a result, there is less intake capacity, in particular because of the quota system for graduate student scholarships, which has a direct impact on a university's development. As I said earlier, less funding for research means fewer funded researchers; fewer funded researchers means fewer graduate students; fewer graduate students means a smaller operations budget; a smaller operations budget means fewer professors and fewer teams to support them.
That's the vicious cycle I was talking about earlier.