Absolutely. At the financial sector policy branch, we advise the minister on financial sector policy issues. Since the crisis back in 2008-09, we've found an increasing workload over those years. Since that time, the branch has received temporary funding to do the work we need to do to oversee the financial sector and make sure it's stable, efficient, and competitive.
We've found over the course of the years, just given the increasing complexity of the financial sector, that our needs have grown rather than shrunk, so the temporary funding we've received since the crisis is essentially made more permanent by this new funding. That allows us to proactively assess and monitor financial sector developments, particularly on the stability side.
We're looking at vulnerabilities in the economy—particularly with respect to, for example, housing finance—and more broadly working with our international counterparts on strengthening international resolution regimes for financial institutions. If there were ever another crisis, we would then have effective ways to deal with systemically important financial institutions.