I would be interested to hear the Deputy querying the Accounting Officer at the Committee of Public Accounts about money paid out in error and asking him if the Department should not make every reasonable effort to recover the money. I presume that if the Deputy received money in excess of what he was due he would be anxious to have the matter cleared up as quickly as possible. In percentage terms, over-payments represent 0.4 per cent of the total. The money would be of the order of £2.8 million which is classified as non-fraudulent over-payment. That relates to 1989. The Department have a difficulty in this respect. At other times Deputies will exhort the Department not to wait too long, to pay money out and sort out problems afterwards. One the other hand, the Department could insist that they would hold back money until they were absolutely certain that everything was in order. We are dealing with £3,000 million in payments. Mistakes are few. In practical terms and in terms of money there is generally not a problem and the officers deal sympathetically with people when mistakes occur.