As the governor said earlier, the multipliers for the tax cut are a bit smaller than the multipliers you would see from another type of government expenditure.
You can look at it in a whole pile of ways. All I can give you is a range. If you look at the literature or at the models that the Bank of Canada itself has—there are a number of them that you can look up—historically, in the first year the range is 0.1 to 0.4 percentage points, and 0.1 to 0.6 percentage points in the second year. That is the range.
Of course, those ranges don't take into account.... They are coming from the literature and from models that talk about tax cuts and that are very broad, and if the tax cuts are particular to a group of households that tend to spend more out of their income—modest and lower-income households—you would expect the multipliers to be higher.