lord stephenson. you wrote this report. what surprised you the most? the sheer quantity of the problem. 300,000 people, that's the problem. 300,000 people, that's the population i think of newcastletal health condition first. second, the big surprise was how much it's costing us. surprise was how much it's costing us. i'm in this because i want to lessen human suffering. it's misery for the human beings who have long—term or short—term mental health conditions, but to have found that it's costing the economyjust under $100 billion a year is astonishing and it just under $100 billion a year is astonishing and itjust adds up to a perfectly sensible case. we have got to invest in sorting out it and we have a motive. yes, we want to make people happier, but we at a time when we're preoccupied by productivity, it's a way of improving our productivity. you're a man who had a lot of experience with big business and yourself, you have been very frank about your own issues with mental health. how easy do you think it is, not necessarily for big business, but for smaller businesses, to deal with the problem of supporting employees who need it when resources are not as extensive? that's a g