I think you're collectively in a better position to determine that than I am. I would think your work is negatively impacted if you don't know what the performance of government departments has been for the year that ended in March 2022. Here we are on December 1 and we still don't know how government departments did, yet you're on the point of approving almost the final numbers or the final spending items. Next time you'll have a serious opportunity to scrutinize spending. If you find that something went amiss in 2021-22, you'll see that it will be for the 2023-24 spending cycle. There will be a full year where if government departments have failed, they'll have had a free pass. I think that's detrimental to proper government accountability and scrutiny.
On December 1st, 2022. See this statement in context.