Speaker, I would like to respond to the question or statement made by the hon Oriani-Ambrosini, and say that whatever may or may not have been presented in the hearings, it is not the intention of the government to deploy vast subsidies to support a myriad of industries across the country - that is not the thrust of the Industrial Policy Action Plan. Rather, our approach is to work with industry and with labour to identify key bottlenecks that we need to overcome in a defined range of industries, taking some account of the complexity in the industrial processes in the country.
One of the main focuses, in fact, is on the thorough transformation of the industrial financing mechanism, precisely so that we don't have to deploy subsidies on a continuous basis with regard to various industries. The hon member is part of the portfolio committee and we look forward to having an opportunity to engage in a systematic way with the report of the portfolio committee when it emerges.
As far as the remarks he has made about the relationship between our department and that of Economic Development, I think the hon member doesn't seem to understand that while we have agreed to a series of transfers of functions between our departments, we have actually also done that in the context of the creation of a symbiotic relationship, which is reaching beyond silos, and which I think is setting a new tone of co-operative working together within government. He clearly doesn't understand that, but I think that there would be some clarity as we engage on the Budget Votes of the different departments. Thank you very much.