Certainly there are a number of accountability mechanisms that are in place, the most important of which, or the cornerstone, is what we call our inflation target renewal agreement, which is an agreement that sets the bank's objectives, including the target rate of inflation. It also outlines the broad policy tool kit available to the bank.
That is an agreement that is renewed once every five years, following a broad round of consultation with the Canadian public. That process will get under way soon, because the next renewal date for the agreement is in 2026. We consider that to be our cornerstone mandate document, the agreement that we have with the government on what our objectives are.
Beyond that, there are a whole series of what I would call accountability mechanisms that support the independence of the Bank of Canada. We have an independent board of directors. We are audited annually by two separate audit firms. The Minister of Finance can, at any time, request an expansion of the scope of those audits or order a special audit.
The governor and I appear regularly before your colleagues at the House finance committee, at the Senate bank and finance committee and, of course, here today. At every rate decision, the governor and I hold a press conference and a press availability event. We also recently started publishing a summary of our deliberations that underpin each of our rate decisions. We annually publish an assessment of financial stability and hold a press availability event—we'll be doing that for this year on Thursday this week—and we publish an annual report.
Have I forgotten anything, Coralia? I think that's the long list of what I would call accountability mechanisms in place to support our mandate and our independence.