In terms of the summary financial statement, I think it's fair to say it's meant to capture the entirety of the operations of the entities that are consolidated into what is the whole-of-government view. But in terms of the level of detail and the nature of the reporting, that will be dictated by the public sector accounting standards, as Mr. Wiersema said. That's going to dictate the form and nature of the reporting at that level.
In terms of the details, much of the public accounts—the three published volumes—are traditional disclosures. Some of the newer disclosures that are being referenced, the proactive disclosure, to take an example, are more recent.
Frankly, I think the use of things like the Internet makes them a little more accessible than something in hard copy and published once a year. I think the view now is that much information of that sort is more useful to users if we can have it disclosed through that sort of a means.
I think it's a trend you're likely to see. We'll rely less and less on large hard-copy volumes and more and more on the more flexible reporting-type style.