Yes, just one minute, and Jason or Sahir might want to answer the question.
I want you to give me, if you can—if you can't do it, that's fine—an example for us so we understand the difference between what we have now and what a program-style review would be.
In the mains right now—which our NDP friends brought forward at question period—is the reduction in the department of food inspection. It's a sunset. It was approved, it had so many years, and that program is now sunsetted, so that money is removed from the mains.
It may be added back through a budget process, but because the budget process and the mains are at different times, it's great fodder for them. In actual fact, it may be just because the law that was set out—the program—only had a certain line date and has to be renewed, and it can only be renewed through the budget process. How would that be different and how would that look in what you're suggesting in terms of what happens in Australia or New Zealand?