No. What we have seen, for example, and this is something that has been recognized for some time, is that we do have labour shortages in areas like trades, and the laws of economics work so that if you have a scarcity of people with a set of skills, those individuals are going to be able to garner higher compensation.
This is one of the reasons, as I alluded to earlier, we haven't seen the same degree of the sort of hollowing out of the middle-income, middle-skilled jobs as in the United States, because we have had a robust resource sector. We've also had a very robust construction sector during this period of strength in the housing market, so it has helped to support incomes in that area, such as trades, and it has also pushed up compensation for those trades.