I'll answer your last question first. The bottom line of the government will not change. The international public sector standards that everyone uses to measure the deficit and levels of debt will not change. The first reason that won't change is that those are the accounting standards. The second reason is that the ratings agencies won't let you change it. That's the first thing they're going to go to, and if they have a sniff that somehow something...that there's a change in presentation, you can bet your boots that we're going to be paying more for debt pretty quickly.
In terms of operating capital, again, we, on our end, don't know precisely what the government has in mind. There's been no backgrounder published on the website. In some of the communication materials, the government has mentioned the United Kingdom, which has had a similar system in place. In that situation, on the operating side, the U.K. includes the operating expenses that I mentioned earlier—so, the traditional measure—in addition to other types of transfer payments. On the capital side, it includes the traditional measure, as well as transfer payments or money that's being paid out to third parties that also invest in capital.
We have a report that's going to be coming out on Thursday that looks at infrastructure spending. The federal government transfers—I don't know—over the next five years I think it's going to be over $100 billion to provinces, municipalities and first nations to spend on infrastructure. That doesn't show up as capital spending for the federal government, but it actually results in building capital assets. So, that's something that the government could have in mind, but I don't know. I'm not inside the tent.