Thank you very much, Mr. Weston.
I just have a question perhaps to Ms. Fraser and perhaps to Mr. Ralston, and that's regarding the changes you found in the CRA methodology in projecting corporate and personal income taxes. It seems to me—and this goes back 10 years—that we've had difficulties in projecting the actual end-of-year surplus or deficit. If you went back seven or eight years, the surplus seemed to be becoming higher than what the Department of Finance was thinking at the time, right up until year-end. Now, I'm not so sure that we might be into the opposite regime, that they're coming in perhaps lower than what Finance is projecting. When you analyze it and you talk to people, a lot of the blame is put on the projections that come from CRA. The government probably has a pretty good idea what the expenses are going to be, especially at year-end and on March 31, but when they publish the financial statements in September, the surplus is higher. It may not be substantial, but when you're talking $8 million or $9 million, it's a lot of money in my circles.
Ms. Fraser, do you think the new methodology will correct this problem, or do you still have a concern as to the numbers that are being projected by Finance?