It's difficult to assess if it is one for one.
What we know for a fact—and we could provide you with numbers for it—is that we see now and have seen over the recent three to five years a significant increase in the number of the suspicious transaction reports we receive. Last year, we received 125,000 suspicious transaction reports, which are really the bloodline of what financial analysis is all about. Therefore, if the purpose of the regime—and indeed this is the purpose of the regime—is to provide intelligence to our law enforcement partners and our national security partners, the first provider of that information is the private sector. It is the 31,000 businesses that contribute to the regime.
Every increase in quality and every increase in the timeliness of these transaction reports we receive is of greater value to the regime. That's what we've seen over recent years: numbers, timeliness, quality, and openness. If we want to talk about the relationship that we have with the banking sector right now, for instance, we have participated in a project called “Project Protect”. It's not the project that is of interest to us—it's that it was initiated by the private sector, not by us. The relationship is changing, and the credibility of FINTRAC in that relationship is changing as well.