I see your point, and point taken, but this youth unemployment issue is a global phenomenon. It's not just a Canadian problem. In OECD countries, the 34 countries that make up the OECD, there are 26 million unemployed youth between the ages of 15 and 24. In the developing countries, that number skyrockets to 262 million unemployed youth.
I don't know if any of you have read this book that I read a few months ago. It's called The Coming Jobs War. It's by Jim Clifton. I highly recommend it to all of you.
He talks about how we need to create more high-value jobs of the future and to get away from the traditional sorts of jobs that we've been creating, because if we don't.... The future of our countries depends on it. The future economic wars are going to be based on jobs, not on anything else. He gives Detroit as the best example of it. He says that our whole socio-economic foundation will deteriorate if we don't put more effort into creating the jobs of the future, not into still trying to produce buggy whips, if you will, because those aren't jobs of the future. Those are jobs of the past. That was a lot of the problem with Detroit, and now we see what situation they're in.
Could you comment on that? Mr. Gouda and Mr. Lewchuk, do you want to just jump in on it if you feel comfortable with that?