Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Ms. Wasylycia-Leis was right; we did request that information and were told we would get it. It's important to us to get the chart. I'm specifically looking at the minutes, one of which was about who reaps the benefit and how the 1% deduction in the GST affects families across the board. That's important, and it's the same with the income tax cut.
One of the big ways the GST cut has been touted, and has been touted here by Mr. Nadeau, is that low-income families don't pay income tax under a certain level, so the GST helps them.
It helps them very marginally, because many of the products they buy are necessities, a lot of which aren't covered by GST. My concern with the GST cut is that it disproportionately helps those who spend the most. It's pretty simple. It helps the people who spend the most, so it's pretty simple that it helps the rich more than the poor, but I think it's an important thing to factor in—in the simple way that on a more expensive car you save more than on a cheaper car. It's not complicated.
I'm going to ask you about the universal child care allowance benefit. Are you familiar with the Caledon report on that?