Actually, there are a couple of things there.
To answer your immediate latter question, I don't know the number of Canadians who are in that actual tax bracket.
But if you don't mind, I'd like to correct something you said. We are aware that there have already been tax reductions introduced for those in the lowest tax bracket. They were just announced recently by Minister Flaherty and will be retroactive to January 1, 2007, this year. The announcement made in October will actually remove somewhere in the order of 385,000 to 400,000 Canadians from the federal income tax rolls altogether. That is something we had been advocating for ourselves at the chamber of commerce, and it was certainly being advocated for by the national chamber of commerce. That's a tick in the box already. We're happy with that one.
However, this particular personal tax deduction that I spoke of today was presented in the light of labour market attraction and retention. Some of the most highly skilled professionals and workers in different categories are up in that tax bracket. So these are your highly skilled technical people, professionals, people who have a lot of choice in terms of where they're going to sell their labour. We don't need to tell anybody in this room how competitive the labour market is, not only between Canada and the U.S., but globally. So while it might not be emotionally palatable to say that people who make a lot of money should get a better tax break, it's logical that when you're finishing your education and you've invested the amount of money that you need to invest to be able to market yourself to those positions, you have a lot of expenses, and you're going to personally be marketing your skills to the area where you're going to be saving most of your money, and right now that's the U.S.