Yes, exactly. It imposes the equivalent of a U.S.-style housing crisis in Canada—sorry, I wasn't clear in my first answer. Unemployment would go from 7% to about 11% or 12%. Housing prices would decline by about 20% to 30%, harmonized across the country. It shows the effect on the CMHC income statement. You can see, based on that shock, what that would do to the ultimate federal budgetary position, as the Auditor General said.
The bottom line, whether or not it gets you to read it, is that the CMHC has these enormous buffers to protect the federal income statement, the federal balance sheet against a housing shock like that.