 Hi, John. Thanks so much for joining me today to discuss the increase on wholesale prices. I was just wondering if you could provide some insight on, you know, why this is important and also, like, why this may be. The demand is outrunning supply, and whenever demand outruns supply, you've got to expect higher prices because higher prices is the way that the market clears. So I think this is a harbinger of things to come for many months into the future. Where do you think, you know, we can go from here to kind of prevent that long-term problem from happening? Well, I think we're going to have to live with it because in Boston, where you are and in every other major city and in every small city and all across Europe and all across the world, we don't have enough workers. And the question is whether there will be productivity to offset the rise in wage inflation. If there is, then we don't have to have a lot of final goods inflation. And the consumer price index doesn't have to continue to rise. But it's doubtful that productivity will rise fast enough to offset the inflationary labor cost rises. So it looks to me like we're going to have to live with some inflation for some time to come. And unfortunately, you ask, how do you stop it? Well, history tells us that the way you stop it is to get slower growth and more unemployment and higher interest rates. And ultimately, the only answer is a recession, which I hope we can avoid.