No, absolutely. In fact, there is a great study to highlight it from TD Economics on this area. I said it in my remarks, but $23.1 billion is the projected loss of wages due to underemployment and unemployment for youth.
That is a based on a combination of factors, but the primary focus of this study, and I encourage committee members to look it up, was the lack of adequate employment in a variety of areas and how those skills that people were trained in were being lost, and with the opportunity lost, what the cost to commodifying that into a dollar value would be.