Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I have a question for Mr. Ralston. We know that we have high standards compared to other governments worldwide. We have financial management and clean audits. We know on the other hand that Enron, when it was in business, probably had a lot of people doing a lot of financial reports and audits. They showed up looking pretty good until they found out the cupboard was bare.
So it's obviously about more than financial reporting and audits. It has to be the kind of people you hire. It has to be the quality of internal oversight. It has to be, in fact, the oversight of Parliament, I think, that's important.
So on the marginal benefit that you refer to in spending over $300 million in auditing every department every year, I just want to be clear on what I'm saying and what you're saying. You're confident that it's not necessary to spend that much money or more to audit every department every year, because there won't be enough benefit to the public in assuring that the systems have integrity.