Thank you, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, we are expecting, and again I cannot break this out by sector, as I do not have that information in front of me, $55 million in personal income tax. We expect that to maintain itself and to increase. Not by us increasing the rates, but by the number of people who are working.
Corporate income tax in 2000-2001 gives us almost $40 million. We realize, as I mentioned earlier, there is a bit of a windfall this year. Next year it will go down to about $34 million or so.
Payroll tax, under the current regime, gives us $8.8 million, and that will increase as employment increases. Fuel taxes are about $10 million, closer to $11 million, going up to about $13 million. Tobacco tax will maintain itself at about $9.8 million. Property tax will maintain itself at about $8 million, then rising in a couple of years to roughly $9 million. Insurance taxes will maintain itself at about $1.5 million. All of that will either maintain itself, we project, or increase. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.