Sure, I'll pick up on that as well. I think Andy said it well in terms of having the right kind of intermediaries and the right kind of partnerships in community to be able to address or tackle these particular problems, and the right kind of data and right kind of problems identified by government and community actors.
It's all going back to the point that if we're trying to focus on social impact bonds, as has been delivered for example in Peterborough, they are one flavour or one example. If we're thinking about this in the context of focusing on prevention and focusing on outcomes, there's an array of different options and solutions that can get you to tackle the problems that you're facing. I think that as much as social impact bonds is an important part of the ecosystem, to think about social finance within the context of what Andy had talked about in terms of resilient fund cuts across a whole variety of different areas: housing, food, and health and wellness.
There's a range and an array of opportunities. If there's a means by which you can integrate social finance or bring it into the different ministries and parts of government, then I think you could really identify a great opportunity to get these different players excited and activated about how they can actually move money towards more good purposes and move business towards more good purposes.