That's today, but I believe that in the early days there was an assumption that at a certain level of revenues there would be a considerable offset.
If I might just add to the list of reasons given by the Auditor General, I think--and I can relate from previous committee meetings--that previous administrations have acknowledged that to build a national licensing and registration system was uncharted territory. There is nothing like it in the country, and it had to be built from the ground up. I think most people would acknowledge today that the assumptions as to what it would cost were ambitious. In hindsight, we can now look back and say that in the business case, some of the parameters may well have changed, but in fairness that's done with an awful lot of experience, with 10 years of hindsight.