Thank you. We've added another 380,000.
Your question about quality is an important one. About three-quarters—77% to be exact—of those jobs are in industries where the wage is above the average wage paid, so those are in higher quality industries as measured by wage. The vast majority of jobs—I think almost 85% on the most recent read—are private sector jobs. Most of them are, obviously, full-time as opposed to part-time. The quality of job creation has been high.
We're obviously still, though, in a position—I think all members would agree—where there are more Canadians who want to work than are working. We can see that in a variety of measures. The unemployment rate is at 7.3% to 7.4%. The employment-to-population ratio is still a couple of percentage points lower than it was before the recession. The level of involuntary part-time workers, people working part-time who want to work full-time, is still elevated relative to what it was prior to the recession. All those factors are important from a monetary policy perspective. They're obviously important from a personal perspective, but from a monetary policy perspective they're important because they illustrate a degree of slack that still exists in the labour market measured across the country as a whole, which is one of the reasons that a monetary policy can be and continues to be and should continue to be very accommodating.