Thank you, Madam Chair.
I wish to follow on my colleague Mr. Van Kesteren's line of thinking. To me, job creation and job matching are somehow separated in our economy. We train a lot of people and then we say they're on their own to go look for a job or the government can put its resources into job training and job creation.
I also bring this back to other issues. We train a lot of very highly educated kids and what they end up doing is going to Japan, Korea, China to teach English. I often question the merit of this. Yes, it's broadening their experience, but when they come back they're still in the same hopper of saying, “How do I train myself for a proper job?”
Mr. Atherton or Mr. McGovern, perhaps you can shed some light on where government resources are best employed. Is it in the job matching aspect or in the job training aspect once it's matched? And what are the priorities in how we do that?