If I may, from 2006, which is the figure we've been focusing on, we had 5,200 auditors and today we have 6,042 auditors. So the number of auditors has actually gone up, not down. Now we have implemented efficiency measures. Most recently, we had 186 managerial employees that were affected. That doesn't mean they lost their jobs. It means they received a letter saying they would be reassigned new responsibilities, so from our perspective we were trying to reassign them from semi-managerial responsibilities to audit responsibilities, actually increasing the number of auditors we had. As a result, there was a bit of a span of control issue. But anyway, the bottom line is that we have made changes to become more efficient and more effective but absolutely there's no reduction in the number of auditors.
On December 3rd, 2014. See this statement in context.