The answer to that question is not really known, according to the government’s General Accounting Office. In January 2006, the unit will begin the “Module of Patrimonial Accounting” that will allow the nation, for the first time, to know just what belongs to the government and how much it is worth. GAO director Guaroa Guzman met with reporters from Hoy to outline the planned inventory of the State’s properties. Not only will the results identify what is owned, and how much it is worth, it will also determine the properties’ locations. Because of the scope of the program, the GAO has signed an agreement with the National Survey that will provide surveyors to locate and measure government lands as well as to establish the values of the different parcels. Government buildings will also be evaluated and inventoried.