I think what's important for our fiscal policy, whether it's federal, provincial or thinking of everything together, is to have a fiscal policy that is sustainable in the long run. What we're facing right now in the current crisis is an extraordinary circumstance. By partially shutting down the economy, debt is being created. That debt might be in the form of households taking on more debt. It might be in the form of businesses taking on more debt. If they were to go bankrupt, it would be in the form of banks taking on more debt.
Now, on the debt that is being created, what we're doing is reallocating that debt from the household sector and from the business sector, some of it going to the public sector. The question here is not whether we should have debt, but how we allocate it across sectors. That debt is being generated by the virus. It's not being generated by anything else right now. The question is how we allocate it. There is some question of what should go on the federal books, on the provincial, and how much the household and business sector can sustain. I think that's a very healthy conversation to have now.