Thank you for the question.
We do reconciliations, and I would ask members to look at page 34. I'll just pause one moment so folks can get to that page. Give me a thumbs-up when you're there. Perfect.
You see the representation of Canada's debt dynamics in an international context. You also see below the accounting framework, to be able to put G7 countries on a comparable basis to compare their respective debt loads. It's a complicated set of math here, but effectively what we're doing is—yes, you're right—putting all governments together, sovereign and sub-sovereign governments all together, to provide a total government perspective.
Then, there are also adjustments, such as...and you can see where we add the assets of the CPP and QPP. It's a necessary adjustment to put things on a comparable basis, because other sovereigns effectively take their CPP and QPP premiums and just put them against general revenues. In order to put it on a comparable basis, we add the assets of these plans into our debt. Likewise, we also bring in the consolidated debts of the provincial governments on top of that.
You can see there are opposing forces that lead to this kind of funky bottom line, which you referred to, where—