Thank you very much for that question.
Over 90% of Veterans Affairs Canada's budget goes directly to veterans for benefits and/or services. Those benefits and services are event driven in that a disability or an illness triggers entitlement and eligibility for certain benefits.
We also have the fact that we have to look and project out over the entire lifespan of veterans. We have a lot of actuarial work that takes place to look at those long-term forecasts. We also have in-year cash forecasts that are more near term that we need to look at, both in tandem.
What we do is we work very closely with the office of the chief actuary and every year we update our client forecast, so there are vast amounts of data that, together with the actuarial staff, we look at and we attempt to make the best forecast possible.
I would add that the event-driven nature of our expenditures is such that our benefits and our services are in special purpose allotments. The technical term is quasi-stats, but it does indicate that they're event driven. In any given fiscal year, whether we have 10 veterans who come forward or 10,000, we assure through our forecast that every veteran receives the benefits and services to which they are entitled.