Exactly.
One thing that concerns me—and maybe you can educate me—is when we have unemployment, how does that affect your pension plans today? We had the Canadian Federation of Independent Business here saying that for every 1% rise in the Canada Pension Plan it's going to cost 220,000 person years of work. If you looked at that, if we looked at the opposition parties and what they're suggesting for increases in CPP contributions and how that would have a domino effect on the small business sector with the loss of employment.... I think the CFIB used the number of up to one million jobs. How would that trickle through to your pension plans, and how would that affect your earnings in those pension plans so that you could actually pay out pensions to the people who are already under your existing plans?
I guess I'm asking you what would massive unemployment in Canada do to your ability to service your pension plans?