Thank you. As the Minister said, for corporate income tax we’re going to use a five-year rolling average. That’s probably a little bit more realistic and a little bit more conservative and gives us some downside mitigation. For personal income tax, because there has been such a big adjustment, we’re going to wait another year and see what happens with the number of filers, and we’ll get a better understanding in May, when we actually get the more detailed data from Canada on what happened with the 2012 tax year, to try and figure out what’s actually happening.
Certainly on the corporate side, we’ve always been subject to a lot of volatility from year to year. We’re going to take a more, I think, prudent, conservative approach.
On the personal income taxes, this is the first time we’ve seen this and it could just as easily come back. We don’t know, so we want to take a little bit more wait and see, and see if we can dig into the data and see if we can see what’s happening there. But on the corporate side, we’re changing the approach where we’re just going to go with the five-year average, as the Minister said, instead of relying completely on the federal estimate.