Okay. I'm disappointed, and it follows along with the information we're getting from your department. Officials who were here the other day didn't seem to be able to answer any questions about the $7.4 billion that we're going to spend on this, potentially. It might go to $9 billion. They couldn't give us the modelling. They couldn't give us the assumptions. They couldn't give us anything, because they didn't know, much like it seems you don't know. These are basic numbers. These are real numbers that I would expect somebody at your level to have at their fingertips on a day-to-day basis about the net debt of Canadians. I'll let that go.
Minister, you talked about Canadians' balance sheets and Canadians' net worth. That's their household net worth, of course. In the last two years, the federal government debt that you're in charge of has gone up by 34% for each individual Canadian. That's up to $42,000 per man, woman and child in Canada. How can you say that their household balance sheets have improved, when the country's balance sheet, to which they are directly responsible, has deteriorated so badly?