Yes, of course there's always a focus on attempting to cut back government spending. Often that will kick the problem to some other part of the Canadian economy, whether the provinces or households, which then have to deal with that debt because health care costs are rising or something like that. Certainly, the other side that I think is underappreciated, as you point out, is the expenditure side. A wealth tax could raise $10 to $20 billion a year; increased taxation of the corporate sector, for instance, could raise $7 to $8 billion a year. The corporate income tax promise was that big increases in capital investment would result, which never appeared, unfortunately. So I think it's time to turn back—the way the Americans and those in the U.K. are—towards higher corporate taxes, as well as closing corporate tax loopholes, particularly for large corporations. These are ways we can also reduce the deficit without harming people who rely on government services like health care, child care and so on.