My second question is for Mr. Leduc.
If we look at the advent of artificial intelligence or the advent of technology, we are now into a different phase of human progress. Automation was created to do repetitive tasks, tasks for which intellectual capacity was not necessarily required because the tasks were repetitive. We are now entering another phase, whether you want to call it industrialization or another phase in our economic growth, whereby artificial intelligence now has the ability to do intellectual tasks.
Now, because of automation of repetitive tasks, you're creating algorithms and creating artificial intelligence through machine learning such that the decision-making is getting better.
How do we deal with potentially having underemployment of a class of people who are educated or trained to apply their intelligence to any task?