Thank you, hon Minister. I look forward to reading that reply. It was very comprehensive and needs a bit of digestion. Let me say that there are two elements to my question. The first one is that successive governors of the Reserve Bank have talked about the impact of rising administrative prices on inflation. That is an important issue, but that is not the concern of my question. My question is rather addressed to the question of industrial policy.
I am very interested to hear that there are so many different bodies that are regulating administrative prices. It seems to me that that might be a problem. There are too many bodies, each one making its own levels of administrative prices, and there is not sufficient coherence across the state sector.
Therefore, I was wondering whether you could tell me whether you yourself, your Ministry and your department are able to do anything at all to introduce a greater degree of coherence in the whole policy of regulation so that administrative prices are seen, not merely as something internal to a particular body, but as something that affects national policy and the whole question of national development. We really do need to promote economic development across the whole sector. It seems to me that if we have silos, each one deciding its own level of administrative prices, this does not drive towards a coherent economic development policy. [Time expired.]