We have built a bit on that work since then, notably in response to requests from various political parties during the electoral campaign to cost various measures to combat tax evasion or to tax web giants that have income that they repatriate to their home countries or to their head office countries, which are often in tax havens. We haven't built up or refined the estimate of $25 billion that was mentioned in our report of last June, but we have refined our understanding of various types of aggressive tax planning, and in some cases, tax evasion and tax avoidance. It's unfortunate that I cannot provide you an updated number to that $25 billion, but we have a much better understanding than we had then. We also have a much better understanding of the high-net-worth individuals and the various types of arrangements they enter into to minimize their tax bills.
For example, we have a report in the making about high-net-worth individuals and how wealth is scattered or attributed by income level. We have a report in the making that will outline the share of wealth held by various types of families, showing that, unsurprisingly, a very high proportion of net wealth is held by a small fraction of the population. We are refining our understanding of the whole phenomenon of tax avoidance and tax evasion.