Mr. Speaker, as a government, we do not make loans. We give grants and contributions. We lend money through the Business Credit Corporation. The Business Credit Corporation is a lender of last resort. The businesses have to go to the banks first and show us that they are not able to get the money through a conventional lending agency. So they come to the Business Credit Corporation very much as they would to a bank, except this is a last resort. We operate the Business Credit Corporation very much on the kind of guidelines that a bank would make. This is money that is loaned to companies. It is not money that we do not except them to pay back, but it is money we expect they will pay back with interest and we operate very much like a bank.
In terms of changing it and suddenly making or giving notice to borrowers that their name is going to be published and the amount they have borrowed will be published even though they make regular payments, I could take that under advisement and refer back to the department. As a practice, we have not done that up to now. We consider it to be a confidential matter between the business and the Business Credit Corporation and there is not, in our view, anything to be gained by making lists like that public unless, of course, there are some other extenuating circumstances. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.