Monetary policy-making is fundamentally data-dependent and by that I mean not the individual bits that we refer to, but the entire economy. Now we know fiscal actions are being taken. Some of them will happen quickly. Some will take longer, but they are happening. For us now, they're just in the mix.
We will watch the economy and see if the economy measures up to our expectations and as long as it does, then everything's fine, but if there is for some reason a shortfall in growth, that of course will mean that it will postpone our achievement in the inflation target and we will then have to reconsider whether or not monetary policy requires adjusting. If the opposite occurs, such as an upside surprise, which would be very pleasant for a change, then of course we would have the opposite situation.
That is to say the monetary policy is alive throughout that piece, not the precise individual parts, depending on how the data evolve.