Thank you very much.
It's also a good opportunity to come back to Tony's questions about CPP.
One of the really neat things about CPP is that it has a child-rearing dropout provision that recognizes the time and effort it takes for women to raise children where they can't be in the labour force. Unfortunately, you don't get the benefit of that until you're 65. When you're 25 or 30, it is a huge economic risk for women to have children, if you look at the rate of divorce, the rate of default on child support payments, all those things. That's why you have lone-parent poverty rates that are as high as they are.
You might again want to look at other countries to see different examples of how they do it. I don't know the details from Sweden, but I understand that a lot of their efforts to address lone parenthood are done through the tax system and that their lone parent rate of really serious poverty is extremely low compared to Canada. I think we have a lot of work to do on that. Some of the EI reforms around parental benefits were incredibly well done, but could have been done so much better and much more flexibly to allow all new parents to have some benefit of something that is a human benefit to the whole country.