To go for a second to the pension and retirement aspect of things, you made reference to increasing the contribution to the RSP. I'm not sure—I was on the finance committee for quite some time, and for a while we looked at the usage of the RSP, and the upper level was increased not too long ago.
This was only a couple of years ago, and the problem was that the average Canadian only puts in maybe $2,000 to $3,000 a year. So raising the upper level doesn't necessarily help Canadians with pensions. I'm not sure whether, to what extent, and how many of these are self-employed women who in fact it would help, or whether it would only be those who have a higher income, as opposed to those in the median.
I'm not sure that this is a solution. At the time, I was not supportive of increasing it, because only about 10% of Canadians actually benefit and are able to use the full space.
In addition to the RSP, you looked at some other options, other designs, such as changing CPP, widening it in some way beyond that. I don't find it to be responsive enough to the needs of most women.