It's very hard. The answer to your question is yes, there is an average, but it is divided by how many owe and what's the value. An average is quite often a very bad representation of what the true reality is.
I can tell you that most of our volume is with individual debt, but the amounts are generally smaller. Many Canadians come into issues owing $1,000, $1,500 and things like that. Quite often they are seniors, because they have multiple sources of income but not enough source deduction on each, and they come at time of filing and they owe small amounts.
So there is a variety, and that I think is exactly the point the Auditor General is making in terms of our capacity to analyze. Our systems were not built to do that kind of analysis. We need to build the data so we can do that type of analysis, so we can basically have a better and more strategic way to approach these types of circumstances. If there are seniors with lots of small amounts, we can apply a strategy to it that could be different from the strategy for self-employed Canadians who are short on their quarterly instalments, who owe us $25,000 at time of filing. That's a different business challenge to us than collecting from seniors.