Put it in there as well. Okay. That is what I thought you were saying, but I just wanted to clear that up.
Could I go to income splitting for a minute? Help me understand how it would be equitable, especially for singles. I'm looking at the pension splitting that was done in the most recent budget. There, the people who benefit from the splitting the most—The higher the pensions, the more the benefit, because it's a couple splitting only. Singles cannot split, and there's no provision for widowers or single seniors, for instance. We're talking about seniors now. So it's private pensions or pensionable income that is split.
If your pensionable income is high, the higher it is, the more of a tax break you get. The lower it is, the less you get, and for the modest couples who actually have little to no pension income, they get nothing to split, really.
So tell me how it would work for singles in your scenario.