Mr. Wilson, I appreciated your presentation, because you were one of the few I've heard, in the context of child poverty, talking about the need to really address parenting skills.
I and many of my colleagues in the House of Commons were very poor as children. I won't go into chapter and verse, but take my word for it that we were very poor. I come from a family of seven children, and we all managed to become highly contributing members of society. It was because we benefited from very good parenting, I believe, and I give full credit to my parents.
I found this extremely refreshing, and I think you've hit on something important. By emphasizing the child part of poverty, we've actually missed the whole boat, because it's really the parenting that, in my view, is the key. Would you agree with that? Can you expand on the relationship there?