We would have to answer this separately. I will answer for IPPF.
I think what has changed for us, in fact, is that we are providing more services.
And actually, we've been in existence since 1952. Our funding from Canada has been since 1960.
We continue to expand the number and range of services we provide. We also have taken great strides--the question of accountability came up--to really monitor and evaluate the quality of our services, to give an indication of the value of the investment our donors are making in IPPF in terms of what happens on the ground.
So while no organization expects to receive funding in perpetuity, and certainly not without review and evaluation, we actually go out of our way to make sure that more and more information is available by which Canada or any other donor can evaluate the quality of our work.
I am led to wonder, in the event that our funding is not renewed, in the context of a major initiative on maternal mortality, whether that would not constitute a major shift in policy rather than a judgment on the quality of IPPF's work.