Okay. I don't pretend to understand that, but I'll ask a different question.
Deputy ministers will now.... If you're offloading this obligation to the public service to find its own efficiencies, again I am suspect and worried about that. It does smack of the old scientific management gimmicks that were tossed out by human resources programs decades ago. Has the Treasury Board Secretariat given any directives to deputy ministers as they go about that work of finding these efficiencies--guidelines such as who is ultimately responsible for maintaining certain levels of service to the public? If the deputy minister has to find these efficiencies and be the one cutting and hacking and slashing and recommending these cuts, who is ultimately going to be the watchdog to make sure we're not dramatically losing the quality of public services? Who gets to review or even have the veto over the deputy ministers' new authorities?