Sanjay, I'm not sure I can really sharpen the pencil again. I think we were pretty clear. Without there actually being a specific proposal, I just can't do that. I think you should expect that as proposals begin to take form, if they take form, we will certainly do our best to provide that information. But I would rather not sort of suggest sort of numbers without actually them being in response to a real proposal. To the second part of your question around the nature of reforms, we have been tracking a whole host of different reforms over the course of the last couple of years. This is obviously a place where we dig in deeply. I'm not going to try to describe every reform that's out there, but I will tell you sort of our, sort of house position on this, which is it is our belief, Sanjay, that the federal government does too much for too many and not enough for those who really need it. And so what do I mean by that? I mean loans really being kind of a little bit of an overused and primary instrument. Yes, there are some grants, but they tend to be a little bit smaller and a little bit sort of narrowly curtailed in terms of eligibility. And so what you end up happening is you make a lot of un-underwritten and uncapped loans to a lot of people, many of them who don't need the federal loans and have other access to funding and many of whom can't actually afford the loans. And because they're not underwritten, you can't pay them back at the end. And then we get into from a society perspective, a really unfortunate discussion of what do we do about folks who have a couple $100,000 (ph) of federal loans and don't have the professional sort of prospects to make good on those loans and you're into the kind of discussions that I think we've seen play out over the last roughly four years. So I think our position has been the government should do more to provide access to and completion of higher education for folks who are really economically disadvantaged. I think we see a college education and I would even broaden it, a higher education experience because it could be a certificate program, a non-traditional program, has been an incredible driver of social and economic mobility. So I think it's our view that there should probably be thoughtful consideration to are we providing the right amount of money that those really economically disadvantaged cohorts don't have to pay back. I think we would really propose pretty actively a limit on the kind of sort of open and underwritten loans to make sure that those do not get out of hand. And I think what that means and a few of you have asked about it in different ways is that there's probably then a different role for the private sector going forward and potentially a different role or a different set of choices that students can make, state schools versus private schools or the case. So, I think that's one piece of it. Kind of an expansion of sort of grants where appropriate, a curtailing of loans. There's other things that we would be very open to. I think bankruptcy reform is one that gets talked about from time-to-time. Student loans generally are not dischargeable today in bankruptcy, that really does put customers in a place where they're burdened for a lifetime with decisions that they may have made 15 or 20 years ago. I think we would favor some thoughtful bankruptcy reform, especially after some kind of a seasoning period to make sure you didn't get into sort of misaligned incentives. But I think it's our thought that bankruptcy is a well-established process for folks to clear their debts. And with the right protections and the right thoughtful process, there's no reason in our minds why student loans should not necessarily be considered as a part of that. So there's a lot of those different pieces. I know there's other thoughts being put out there about trying to tie schools into the quality of the degrees. That all gets to me very complicated and I'm not actually sure how it's administered and how it's worked. So I'm not going to try to comment on all of that. But I think if you take away nothing else, I would sort of fall back to this too much for too many, not enough for those who really need it. And I think if nothing else, there's a real opportunity for us to have thoughtful discussion across both sides of the aisle on these kinds of proposals and we certainly hope that this Congress and this administration takes that up.