Mr. Chair, as Mr. Matthews has pointed out, the purpose is really to try to help parliamentarians understand the end-year use of the funds. If appropriation dates are going to serve that purpose, if they're going to be more meaningful in terms of what the financial performance of a financial entity is, then an appropriation-based accounting would not necessarily be appropriate. So, really, it's for a better understanding as to how Parliament intends to use that information and what the best way is to provide that information.
Mr. Matthews also alluded to a database. Is that a better way to do it? In other words, it would be important to determine the real purpose of the quarterly financial statements, have a better understanding of them, then decide whether the form and the manner prescribed right now under the Treasury Board accounting standards, the TBAS, were the most meaningful way to meet that.
Right now as it stands, status quo doesn't seem to be serving one purpose or another, so it's basically just a form that people try to accomplish, providing some narrative and providing some use of appropriation information on a quarterly basis. The departments don't seem to be making much use of it. It's not clear to us how Parliament's making use of that, and the only thing that we saw was the PBO, and even then we thought that the format wasn't particularly all that helpful to them. So status quo, if it requires work from departments and agencies, and it doesn't seem to be serving a really good purpose, that's what we encourage the Treasury Board to look at to see if we can make improvements on that.