Is not Deputy O'Hanlon's thesis correct that in addition to the expected EBR of £600 million this year, one is also dealing with an apparent significant slide — now a desired slide — in the value of the Irish pound which, if it has the effect it is supposed to have, will push the increase in the national debt this year towards £1 billion, unless tax revenue is very buoyant? Will the Minister agree when he and his pals are taking the alkaseltzer tomorrow morning, after the party in Lansdowne Rugby Club to celebrate Tony Blair's victory, that English money market people will probably be at work dealing with a boost in the value of sterling, based on the landslide? The situation will not get better, it will get worse. Will the Minister agree that if the general prevailing interest rates in Ireland increase as a reaction to currency movements, this would be another reason to believe the cost of funding the national debt is on the increase, quite apart from the absolute level of national debt?