Correct me, but don't the departments already work in a form of managing their cash?
Let's say you make a decision that you're going to lease a building. You only account for the cash of the cost of the lease, but you've made that decision. You know it's going to cost you this much for the next 30 years. How do you handle that? Is it just cash managed?
On the other hand, for instance, CIDA makes a decision that we're going to invest $100 million in Afghanistan, let's say. Well, they're not going to spend that amount this year. It may take five years or it may take three. You're saying, do they actually book the $100 million at the time of the announcement, or do they only book that part of cash that they actually spend?
In a sense, the government is already doing things of that nature. Maybe you could explain a little bit how they actually do this. They don't call it accrual, but I'm convinced that there's a form of that ongoing. Am I correct, or am I just guessing here?