I'm not going to be able to give you a good response, because I'm a lawyer, I'm a practitioner, I'm on the ground, and I see a lot of people struggling with the systems they're working in. I can't say necessarily that it's inefficiencies. People are doing a lot more with less nowadays.
I work in a service funded by the provincial government, and we're told to find efficiencies. Everybody is doing that. I think people are on a pretty thin edge of the wedge everywhere.
I'll use police as an example. I'm seeing the police doing a lot with very little, but they still need the time to do the work properly, and there may be need for more resources there. I don't know if it's going to produce the efficiency. I'd be afraid that simply focusing on efficiencies without really looking at things more comprehensively way would divert people from what I'd call the meat of the issue. We get diverted to looking at how we can cut rather than at how we can do a good job.