I'll just say, really quickly, that these are really long-term things. Even when you look at the last 10 years, it's correct, as Stephen Richardson said, that when you look at that period there isn't much of an increase in inequality. In fact, this is a roller-coaster period. We had the dot-com bust, we had the financial crisis—it goes all over the map. Really the big increase in inequality was, roughly speaking, from 1985 to 2000, and since then it's hard to tell.
But the question was also about intergenerational mobility. Of course, intergenerational mobility by itself is a very long-run thing; you're talking about how parents' income affects their children's income. It's a very long period. The best data we have suggests that in Canada, intergenerational ability is still pretty good.