This is actually more Dr. Good's bailiwick, but I'll put it to you that if you are, for example, determining that you wish to help defray the costs to women with children of child care, surely Finance shouldn't be the department that designs the program, so to speak. I think that's the problem. Presumably there are other departments in the federal government—and I'm not familiar with them all, obviously—that deal with the programs themselves.
It seems to me, as Dr. Good has said, that there's a kind of gap whereby a decision may be made that we wish to deliver more funds to women with children for a variety of reasons, but then when it's done through the tax system, it is as I mentioned really constrained by that. Surely there are other government departments with officials who have expertise in child care, expertise in the experience of women with children, families with children, and so on.