There's currently no other mechanism through which to obtain the information. There is simply no other way. It's not public information yet.
I think that to improve the quality of the analysis and also to better situate why you would do gender budgeting, it's really important to make aspects of it public. I don't think it all needs to be public, but I think that critical components need to be public. Because we're speaking about women, I think it's important to be in dialogue with the constituency that is women, the organizations that represent women, so that they can contribute to the process.
One of the more frustrating aspects is that for many years we haven't had reliable access to the finance department in any sort of meaningful way. In the absence of that, the only way for us to obtain the information about what's happening—