I think budget secrecy is overstated as an impediment. I think what budget secrecy is intended to do is to protect against anybody learning what policy is being proposed and then cashing in on it by speculating in a way that is effectively fraudulent on insider knowledge. I certainly don't agree with any insider knowledge being given to anybody, but there's no reason governments shouldn't announce to the world what they're thinking about doing. And increasingly governments are doing this.
As long as everybody knows at the same time, there can't be any objection from a budget secrecy point of view to the fact that a particular policy is being considered and then an outline given to the community about what is under consideration. I think budget secrecy in the past has been overstated, and I think it's breaking down. I think it's a good thing that it is breaking down.