The Minister for Finance will appear before the Banking Inquiry today.
Michael Noonan will be the last of 95 different witnesses to attend public hearings.
After four months of hearings, today will mark the last day of public business for the Banking Inquiry.
Michael Noonan will take questions about his plans to burn bondholders - and how they were stopped - and about the government's own management of the economy since coming to office.
Similar questions will also be put to Ajai Chopra, who was the head of the IMF's mission to Ireland in 2010 - and who personally oversaw many of the controversial moves demanded by the Troika. He's giving evidence this morning.
The European Commission will also answer questions - one of its top civil servants will give evidence on Europe's role in supervising Ireland's economy, and whether the same mistakes could still happen again.
When all of that's done, members will retreat back into private hearings to compile their full report - which is offi