Thank you.
Mr. Page, I wanted to return to the issue of forecasting, and you and I have talked about this before. Actually, I'm not that hard on forecasters, because I don't know if I see it as issues of mistakes; rather I see it as changing conditions. If you could go back two years, you couldn't say if there was going to be an Arab Spring, or tell if Japan was going to have the natural disasters it has had, or predict the impact on the economy of those events. That is very hard to predict. So forecasting is a very difficult field.
But I want to return to the issue Ms. McLeod first raised. And Ms. Glover's point, in terms of moving it out from the Department of Finance seemed to me—it was done by a former government—to be a good idea: to do the average of private sector forecasts. To make sure I'm clear on it, are you recommending that the department, in addition to that, do its own forecasting? Or are you recommending that it not do that, not take an average of private sector...but reverse that earlier decision and bring forecasting back within the Department of Finance?