That's a very good question, and I think in fairness there has been some measured progress. Ten years ago when I was at HRDC and we began gender-based analysis, the general view was to set up a unit and get it done.
I think more and more now we're saying let's integrate that unit into our strategic policy analysis and have it undertaken, and integrate it into the decision-making process of the department and ensure that in all our policy analysis on questions of EI--employment insurance--and questions on OAS and GIS, all of which affect women fundamentally, and questions on labour questions in the department, we examine the gender-based implications.
The tendency of course, as was mentioned earlier, is to focus on the incremental and new decisions and not to go back into the base of expenditures.
The second thing that's happened is that we now generally require that this be examined and included within a memorandum to cabinet as going forward. While I haven't had the opportunity—and I certainly wouldn't want to tell tales out of school—to sit through cabinet meetings in the last number of years, I did have the opportunity previously. I think one of the key things there is to ensure that ministers are now demanding this. If the demand is there, the supply can be produced.
The third thing that I think is important is that we now have included this in Treasury Board submissions. When a Treasury Board submission comes forward for new authority for a program, or for new funding—and granted they do not focus on the tax side, they focus on the direct expenditure side—there is a requirement for gender-based analysis. I think that's important.
Ten years ago I don't think these gender-based analyses would have been prepared in the Department of Finance, perhaps in the same way as they have happened. Certainly over that past 10 years we have seen at least one Minister of Finance say that to the best of his ability he would ensure that there was gender-based analysis undertaken in the context of his budget. So I think we are making progress. Ten years ago you didn't have a parliamentary committee on the status of women examining these important issues and bringing people to appear before the committee.
So I think there is measured progress being made. Is there more to be done? Absolutely. And it lies in the interaction between the decision-makers and the players. That becomes the important thing, to ensure that better-informed, more thorough, and comprehensive analysis gets into the decision-making process.