Sir, the report that we will release between now and probably late January or February, when we typically get a budget, will look at longer-term economic and fiscal projections. We'll actually look forward, even in a 50-year time period, using different assumptions for demographics, productivity, and labour input. We'll look at the fiscal impacts of that aging as well.
Again, when we talk about this, what we're trying to do for you, sir, is to give you a context around some of the fiscal challenges that we face, and not only in the medium term, as we're saying today in pointing out that we're looking at having a small structural deficit. Also, to really get at it and assess whether that small structural deficit is sustainable, I think you have to project forward and see what the impacts of aging are going to be, because aging will slow labour supply growth, which means that revenues will be down. Aging will also put upward pressure on those old-age security payments, as you know very well, sir, from all the work you've been doing, and it will put pressure on health-care related expenditures.
We'll lay that out under different scenarios. It will give you the context to decide what types of fiscal targets we need, what some of those policy challenges are, and how we bring the two together, which is really the interesting debate that you folks weigh in on. But we'll give you that context.