Yes. I expect the novel will be coming out any time.
Going back to the issue that I was on, about this expansion of your authorities, some might call it a power grab, but I wouldn't want to characterize it that way. On the first point, with respect to the inconsistencies and the language--unless there's a good reason why there are distinctions to be made between the Canadian financial system and the Canadian market, etc.--I take your point that the market is within the financial system, but it seems to me the first rule of good drafting is consistency in language. So I'd like to hear why the language is what the language is, from whoever looks at these things.
Actually, I'm more concerned about the overall issue here, which is essentially that you get to decide whether there is or isn't a financial crisis; you get to decide what's going to be on the list and what's going to be off the list; then you publish a list in seven days and then you can go off and buy anything, and there's essentially no oversight. There's no parliamentary oversight to that. Certainly the government can't tell the governor what to do with respect to what the instruments are. You said in your initial response to me that would include, potentially, the purchase of asset-backed commercial paper. Almost the entire financial community didn't understand what it was they were buying there.
What assurances can you give Canadians that in fact this expansion of powers doesn't, in effect, suck the Bank of Canada into the very crisis that you're trying to avoid? It seems to me that the Bank of Canada is where you want the buck to stop, for want of a better phrase.