Yes, just as a curiosity, that would be great.
I have a larger comment, and that is, ultimately, money doesn't grow on trees. We have pension plans in order to provide pensioners with income after they stop working. I understand the desire to make sure there is more money available for that than there might otherwise be, and I understand the desire to have the cost of the money going into the pension plans being as small as possible, because whether they're contributory or non-contributory, no one wants to pay more than they have to pay into these plans. So there's clearly an incentive, once there is money in a plan, to make the most use of that money in terms of generating revenue. Of course, what we now see is that there was perhaps too great of an incentive to maximize the return and too great of an incentive to engage in greater risk.
I think there's an understanding that we would all like to see a greater balance, but recognizing that the balance includes a desire to not have too much going into the plan in the first place. That's just a general comment.
I have a question for Monsieur Malo. My colleague had asked a question about how, in the ideal world, the net contributions we receive would be invested in the Canadian government inflation-linked bonds. I think you said there were two answers. The first one was that there just isn't enough of a market out there. I don't know that we got to the second one. Could you provide the second part of that answer, please?