Thank you very much for that.
If I told you the reason why, on this side, the government's looking at things like social financing.... It's not necessarily just social impact bonds but the whole of social financing. The reason we're doing so is that we know that governments have limited amounts of money. We know that we're probably going to be spending more on health care. We're probably going to be spending more on other things.
So we look at one of our big-ticket items...and when I say “big-ticket”, I mean a big cost to the economy, such as the cost of crime. I'm talking about the cost of crime, not just criminal activity, but the total cost of crime, the whole social impact of that. In terms of using those precious dollars, we don't want to increase that budget—we know that other budgets will increase whether we like it or not—and we want to continue down the road of reducing crime.
I'm going to give you this, although I hate to say how old it is. When I was a young police officer, we were more interested in catching the bad guys, but when I looked at it, I was left thinking—that may shock some people—