Mr. Chairman, I'll add perhaps one thought.
I think it's a very astute question. The country is facing a number of challenges simultaneously. In terms of the economic crisis, I think the most important implication will be on the fiscal room the government has on the reconstruction side. It's going to require a reformulation of the plans that were in place by the IMF, by the World Bank and by the Asian Development Bank. That is now in process, but I think we're going to have to expect that the path of stabilization that had been agreed to by the multilateral organizations and the Government of Pakistan before the crisis is going to have to be revised.
I was in Washington at the World Bank 10 days ago at a flood meeting. I saw very keen awareness by all the players, especially the multilaterals, to look at everything they had been doing in light of the floods. That's going to be, I think, the requirement now—essentially, a reformulation of the plans in light of the crisis and the need for reconstruction.