It's exactly what it is. I don't understand the point of order at all.
How do you intend, Mr. Hamilton, to pursue new thinking around environmental economics, natural capitalism, monetizing equal services? How is it you see getting these central agencies, which have been for decades, under every government, extremely resistant to rethinking, for example, how we measure and report on wealth in this country?
Let me give you one example that you can draw on. When I was in a previous life at the national round table, we gave to the Department of Finance five or six key indicators that could be used alongside classical economic reports, like GDP up, GDP down, unemployment up, inflation is X or Y. We actually developed a couple of natural capital indicators to start reporting to Canadians on wealth, which heretofore remains outside the traditional economic thinking in terms of how we measure our wealth as a nation state. Can you give me some idea, after 25 years in Finance--which I think is your greatest asset to bring to this job, in my estimation--of how you see that going forward?