That's an interesting question.
We did a report in March, I think, or maybe later than that, on capital spending under the “Strong, Secure, Engaged” defence policy. We looked at the planned spending, especially on the capital side, in 2017-18 compared to the most recent actual expenditures.
We find that the pace at which the Department of National Defence has spent was lower than initially planned, which has resulted in a re-profiling of these expenditures of about $10 billion—if I am not mistaken—over the first four years of the defence policy. The Department of National Defence was behind schedule in these expenditures, which resulted in a re-profiling of these expenditures to later in the period.
That's probably as a result of challenges resulting from the procurement process and delays that the Department of National Defence encountered in procuring these major acquisition programs or launching these major acquisition programs. One can only speculate that, with additional or new equipment being purchased, as you referred to, the fighter jets and the surface combatants, notably, there could be further delays, but it's hard to predict at this time whether there will be additional delays in spending these amounts.
We have taken the Department of National Defence's spending profile going forward at face value. We did not adjust further what the Department of National Defence submitted to us for the purpose of this report.