It's difficult to say.
Again, it depends on the machinery change we're talking about. I think the system is nimble enough to start to establish more discipline up front so that when new programs and initiatives are brought into the budget process, they have some sort of substantive costing attached to them.
Whether departments and agencies are ready for that—whether they have the financial management and accounting capacity to be able to appropriately cost initiatives, not just at some indicative level but at an actual substantive level, so that when they roll out of the budget process they're immediately included in estimates—is probably a question better focused to the Treasury Board Secretariat and its overall stewardship of the CFO and financial management community.