Well, if you look at the fiscal results today, there are two very striking features to them. One is that departments have been underspending their budgets, as they did in the last fiscal year. You have to assume that at some point they'll catch up, because they're underspending what they're allocated to spend.
The second feature is that personal income tax revenues are extraordinarily strong. They've been running at plus 11% year over year, and I suspect a good part of that is the capital gains. The stock market has been very strong, and housing prices have gone up. While we don't pay capital gains on principal residences? We do on investment properties and second—