I am not sure I have the expertise to answer that question satisfactorily for you.
With the international ones we looked at, it was just one piece of a whole process that was outcome oriented. You establish what outcomes you want, and then you work back and decide what use of resources is needed to get to those outcomes.
I think that is one of the reasons previous witness testimony we have seen, before the 2012 report this committee did, indicated that it would take a long time to do because, as Stephenie said in her remarks, it is a whole culture change.
This government is partway there already. The budget is already on an accrual basis. The financial statements are on an accrual basis. They compare actuals to budget. They have a feel for that.
The last piece is what we have authorized you to do in Parliament, in terms of the use of cash, in this case. How do we link, “We have authorized you to use this amount of cash” to this outcome? As MPs, you don't have that information. Taxpayers can't evaluate and hold the government to account on that basis.
They have all done it in different ways, but they have tried to make it outcome oriented rather than just output oriented. It is a culture change, as well. As I said, though, this government is partway there with that. It is just that last link to the appropriations that is missing.