Chairperson, member, thank you very much for that question. That is exactly the point I was trying to make at the end of my response to Mr Harris.
What we are doing is part of our comprehensive review of procurement in making sure that procurement becomes a tool for industrial development and to review the NIPP. At the moment, what is happening is that you import $10 million and you are supposed to negotiate an offset to the value of about one third of it.
The problem has been that it is not clear whether it is applicable to municipal government in the provinces or just the national government. I think that, in so far as an arms deal is concerned, we have achieved, broadly speaking, what was required at that particular point. But we need to be able to achieve much more from procurement by way of encouraging local industrial development and the reform of the NIPP as part of procurement to get much more local industrial development. This is one of the major objectives of the Industrial Policy Action Plan, and the work on that has proceeded to a quite advanced stage. Thank you.