Here's where I want to stop you. The circumstances you've set up and the reference you used was that a generation ago, 21% of young people worked part-time, and today 48% work part-time. You mentioned that part of this was because of the quality of the job, retail, wholesale, hospitality.
In my generation, growing up in rural Canada, I can tell you that retail, wholesale, and hospitality didn't exist. They do exist today; those jobs are there. The labour-intensive jobs.... People milked cows by hand. They don't milk cows by hand anymore. I'm on the other end of that generation. I just want to reference that for future comment.
The other issue is the education system. We hear time and again that young people, young men and young women, are not being directed into the arts and sciences, that they're being directed into the humanities. Here's the statistic: 22% of community college students in Canada have university degrees. It's backwards to the way the system should be working.
I know I'm running out of time here, but let me say to the Canadian Chamber of Commerce concerning one of the comments made that maybe it's not guidance counsellors who should be directing young men and young women towards employment. Maybe we should have an employment counsellor. Again, that's not the answer, but it's part of it.
Please respond quickly. I know I'm—