This has been done by a number of countries in the world. There are some six countries, only in the world, that are still having external shareholding in their central banks; South Africa is one of them. The United Kingdom, UK, used to have external shareholders in the 1940s; they realised that in order to advance a whole number of things, including their economy, that - actually - the central bank should wholly be owned by the people of the United Kingdom. They went ahead and bought out the external shareholder; they bought them out in the 1940s or so and today the Bank of England is wholly owned by the state of the United Kingdom. The same thing obtains in a number of countries.