Thanks for your question.
It's a partnership. In order to achieve those different parts of the equation, the social and the finance, you need to be able to bring together people who have a stake in one or both.
On the pure social side, I would say that you bring together the community groups, whether they're not-for-profits or charities.
On the financing side, I think it's a little more interesting. What we're seeing evolve is that it's not just financial institutions, although they're there. We're seeing a different spirit, if I can use that term in the financing world, in people who want to make an investment and not achieve just a financial return. These individuals—call them social impact investors or people who want to support social enterprise—are really bringing a different expectation to that market and to this area of policy in asking how they can use their money to achieve a social good.
In the past, we might have been willing just to give a charitable donation; so the ticket to the supper that you mentioned does act as a charitable donation even if you're getting a meal out of it. Now I think there's a certain spirit of investing whereby people say that it's not just about giving a charitable donation, they would really like to see their money grow in a way that they can control from a social perspective, and they also want to see it sustain community organizations. The donation or the grant is really a one-off, whereas in social financing it's an investment model. It tries to achieve something over time, something more sustainable and more long-lasting.