I think that's a really good point. Often things we introduce to try to achieve greater fairness or pursue goals that seem to be attractive add to the complexity.
If you think about the situation with children, we have the Canadian child tax benefit, child expense deductions, the universal child care benefit, and a Canada child tax credit. You could think of cleaning this up.
The working income tax benefit was introduced to try to reduce disincentives for working people, which are coming from the tax system in clawbacks and so on. These things do. You get a situation in which I think ordinary people, rather than doing some calculation and figuring out what their tax burden would be or how much their taxes would go up if they worked some more and so on, figure these things out in a more informal way. They kind of look around at their friends and relatives and they can tell that so-and-so went and got a full-time job but they don't seem to be any better off.
It is very complicated, and I appreciate that.