Monetary and fiscal policy are conducted independently. As I said before, monetary policy must take into account whatever the fiscal plan is for government, because it's an important driver of what the economy will look like.
Our policies, in monetary policy land, have to look pretty far out into the future, because they have their effects over a two-year horizon. Full effects go within six to eight quarters. We must know what is happening on the fiscal side, but of course there's no actual interaction between those two.
In terms of outcomes, any time monetary policy helps bolster economic growth, which I firmly believe it does, that, of course, all other things equal, means that government revenues are stronger and so on. That's what you get when an economy is closer to balanced than far away from balanced. There's interaction in that sense.