Thank you.
I think monetary policy has absolutely exacerbated the inequality in our society, because it has explicitly targeted inflation control. One effect of that is to enhance the real value of wealth—that's how Chris put it—at the expense of targeting full employment, trying to get to a situation where an average worker even in a Tim Hortons has a shot at getting a higher standard of living. In Fort McMurray, the Tim Hortons worker has a shot at getting a higher standard of living, but the Bank of Canada is there to ensure that situation does not occur outside of a few small isolated areas.
That's why the wage share of national income has declined secularly, not just under inflation targeting but under the whole sort of shift towards inflation control as the top priority. The wage share has declined. The share of income going to those who own wealth has increased, and that is absolutely paralleled in the growing personal disparities of income in society. If we want to address that, yes, fiscal transfers are important, but we also have to give people a fighting chance of getting a job and getting a higher income from that job.