Yes, thank you, Mr. Chair. No, and, Mr. Chair, happy to spend a bit more time on it. I think this is actually an important -- quite an important concept that happens across different line items, and this is a good one to use as any.
So we -- the 2023-2024 number that you see there is actuals. We don't get that until much later in the budget cycle. Obviously, we're filing public accounts, you know, after the fact when the fiscal year is well over and we're already well into the next cycle, so the budget would have already been established in 2024-2025 and would have stayed at 13.088 unless we had, through this process, decided to increase the budget. So we wouldn't have had the actuals at the time of preparing the 2024-2025 Main Estimates.
A revised number happens, as we're seeing, you know, with the supplementary estimates that we dealt with earlier this week and starting in last week. Sometimes there's supplementary estimates that have only, you know, a specific one-time amount, but you may see that there are ongoing adjustments to a budget and then that can show up in, you know -- if there's a budget change, it would show up in the revised, and the -- sometimes it's a one-time change, but sometimes, again, then you can bring a forced growth submission which is when -- or other submission and you may see a change in the 2025-2026 estimates. Little time on the clock, so I'll stop there, Mr. Chair.