Senator BRANDIS (Queensland—Deputy Leader of the Government in the Senate, Vice-President of the Executive Council, Minister for Arts and Attorney-General) (14:13): Senator Ketter, I read the media report of the PricewaterhouseCoopers report. I cannot pretend to have read the report myself, but I did notice in the table that was reproduced in the media report that the principle areas in which economic activity was generated were the CBDs of the great capital cities—the postcodes of the CBDs of the great capital cities. Of course, that is what you would expect. Of course you would expect that the CBDs of Sydney and Melbourne and Brisbane and Perth— Senator Bernardi: And Adelaide. Senator BRANDIS: Thank you, Senator Bernardi—and Adelaide and, indeed, Hobart would be where business is concentrated, where the services sector in particular is concentrated, and would be the locality from which, overwhelmingly, the largest amount of economic growth is generated. That is a matter of common sense, Senator Ketter. But we should look at the position of the economy overall. (Time expired)