I think Craig mentioned that the transfers were reduced at that time. It's interesting, if you look at the difference between the market income and the post-tax and transfer income that is offset in Canada relative to other countries—and the OECD is the oracle on this—we're actually quite close to the middle on that.
I think the issue is that income inequality everywhere has been rising. Canada has swept up at the top, but we have maintained a relatively steady place within the OECD. We're not an outlier in terms of leaping up the rankings. Everyone was dealing with these issues. I think the interesting point is that we haven't gone up in the last while, which is when it grabbed the public attention and the attention of politicians like yourselves. It's a conundrum to understand why this is the case. There are lots of reasons around economic insecurity and a general feeling of insecurity, as opposed to the numbers that back it up—the Gini coefficients changing and things like that.