There are indeed risks from continuing to spend at an elevated level. There are two risks. One is that it risks creating a higher debt-to-GDP ratio. It makes it much more difficult to return to a declining debt-to-GDP ratio. But that also depends on the state of the economy. If the economy grows even faster, the debt-to-GDP ratio can continue to decline, even with what would normally be higher levels of deficit. The other risk is that when demand is strong and labour markets are already working at full capacity, when we have full employment, as a few of the other witnesses, notably Monsieur Milliard, talked about, then there's labour scarcity. That can lead to inflationary pressures, notably on wages and salaries. That can be transferred into prices in general.
These are the main two risks. I don't want to spend too much time responding to that, but inflation and the risk of slower debt-to-GDP ratio declines are the two main risks.