All we did in preparing for this submission we wrote in August is we went to the government's website, the Canada Revenue Agency's website, and looked at something called the CRA income statistics for the 2005 tax year, and specifically at interim table 2—universe data. We looked at and analyzed those data, which show every line on the tax return. If you've never done this, you should, because you'll learn a lot about how things work, because it goes though every single line of the tax return and tells you how many Canadians reported an amount on each line of the tax return.
So based on our research, we found that two million Canadians reported a capital gain. I'm not sure those two million are 2% out of the many millions of Canadians actually working and over the age of 18; I think it's higher than 2%, but the statistics break down by income bracket and show that 55% of those have a total income under $50,000. That's based on information from the CRA website, based on filed tax returns for the 2005 tax year.