Well, I want to be transparent. As I said, the work that Finance has done on the marginal efficiency of the capital gains tax shows that a reduction, or an increase, to put it differently, of the capital gains has a bigger economic impact than a reduction of, say, a consumption tax. It would be misleading to say that the feedback would be 100%, but I don't think there's any question that in generating economic activity there would be a return of some level of revenue.
On September 29th, 2014. See this statement in context.