Thanks for that question.
I'm not sure you should discriminate in that respect, but if you wanted to put a priority on it, then it should be based on the fact that today's working person or family has more facilities to split income than ever existed before. This household plan, for instance, was introduced in 1985. That was the year I retired, so we have limited options to split our income unless we're very wealthy.
Mr. McKay mentioned the wealthy. If you look at the arithmetic, there's a point where splitting your income doesn't do you any good if you're up in the higher echelons of income.
The point is that the group I represent is on a fixed income. Generally, these people came from the generation of homemaker and breadwinner. The institutions at that time pressed forward the idea of the woman staying at home and having kids. My sister had eight kids, and there wasn't much of an option for her to go out and work. That's a rarity these days. So I say that you start there because that's the generation that is suffering the most under these circumstances today.