Again, sir, we're talking about budgetary balances in Canada at the structural level that are relatively small. We've provided a graph for you right now. So for the next five years we're talking about, relative to the size of the economy, even less than 1%. That's a relatively small structural deficit. We had structural deficits in the 4% to 8% range in the seventies and eighties. We ran structural surpluses of about 1% for about 10 years. Now we have a small structural deficit.
Why we highlighted, and I apologize, sir, if I sound Darth Vaderish all the time, is that you worry about running structural deficits as you move to the long term when you're dealing with an aging demographic issue, which is very real. These aging dependency ratios are going to create a lot of problems for finance ministers and prime ministers for the next 10 or 20 years, so that's why we highlight it.