I'd be glad to.
When we did our simulations this year, we found that the average household real disposable income went up by about 0.27% a year over the last 15 years. In 2005 it went up by an average of 0.47%. Sounds pretty good; that one change that the government introduced on July 1 increased real disposable household income by over half a percentage point.
So that one policy move by the government did more than twice as much for Canadians' real disposable incomes than they'd been able to do for themselves over the last 15 years, and more than was done for themselves in a strong economy in 2005. This was a very powerful tool for increasing the incomes of Canadians.