I would like to be able to elaborate more on that but we don't have details of some of these measures. For example, the large employer emergency financing facility is a new measure, and I don't have the details, so I'm not in a position to determine how much it would cost. The same with the extension of the wage subsidy past June. I don't know how long it will be extended or the terms of the extension. The emergency commercial rent assistance was announced on April 16 but the details were announced after we went to print, so we don't have the details.
All that to say it's very difficult to estimate a likely deficit figure, given that details are missing for some of these potentially very expensive measures. I'm not judging them on their merit but they're very likely to be expensive. That points to what I said before, the need for a fiscal update by the government to give Canadians a better idea as to what the deficit is likely to be, because the government probably has in mind a sense of how much it wants to spend on potential stimulus measures, but we don't have that information.
Again, that's why the figure of $252 billion is very likely to be the very optimistic scenario as opposed to the number for the deficit for the current fiscal year.