I think it's a complicated picture. In some areas, the answer is yes. I think within the U.K. a lot of what's happened on social finance would need to be understood within at least a kind of 30-year history of continued outsourcing, of the state being more and more comfortable with outsourcing services to private and third-sector organizations.
The past six or seven years, when there's been an acceleration of focus on social finance, has also been a time of considerable fiscal retrenchment within the U.K., a reduction in some of the grants that go to the social sector. So when we look at the data, it's pretty mixed. There is the extent to which social finance has engaged more social sector organizations in the delivery of services to the public, but within a wider context, some of that being the victim of fiscal retrenchment in the U.K.