Mr. Chairman, this gives me an opportunity to explain a little bit how we approach the audit of the government summary financial statements and what we look at in the context of that audit versus what we look at in the context of a performance audit, a value-for-money audit of a government program.
I would just remind members that the government summary financial statements include total revenues approaching $225 billion, with total expenses of $260 billion and total liabilities of $883 billion. Those are some very big numbers. They reflect the total operations of the Government of Canada.
When we audit those accounts, we're focused on whether the systems and the controls and the transactions are properly recorded, properly approved, and captured in those summary financial reports. We express our opinion that for 12 years--and yes, it's a clean opinion--the government has properly recorded all those transactions and captured them in the financial statements.
As a specific example, would we look at the value for money of a decision to contract out certain expenditures? That wouldn't be the focus of our financial audit. That would be considered more in a performance audit or in something such as the case of the special examination of VIA Rail, as it's a crown corporation.
With respect to the member's questions on the economic action plan, as you know, we did a report on the economic action plan and tabled it last fall. Overall, as you are aware, Mr. Chair, it indicated that the government's initial stages of launching that economic action plan were well managed. In the second phase of that audit, we're looking at individual projects and how they are managed and delivered in the field. The report on that will be delivered later this fall.