I think you know where I'm going with this, because I looked up on my BlackBerry the word “austerity”, and these are all terms that we keep coming up with. It's an economic term, and here's the definition: reducing budget deficits during adverse economic times. You would agree, then, that we need to lower the debt, and it's not a good thing to increase that debt.
Forgive me, I'm not trying to be hard or crass about this, but I wonder if you have done a study—and if you haven't, this would be a great suggestion—to analyze personal debt and find out what it is. You've said—and if you have statistics to prove it, that's great, because that would help this committee as well—that when people increase their debt, it's a result oftentimes, or many times, and I'd love to have that percentage, of when they're having financial difficulties. I've wondered about that. If that's the case, that's a good thing to know. But if it's not the case, I want to just give our chair here some kudos. Our chair has introduced financial literacy as legislation, and I don't think there are too many people who have the knowledge and depth and breadth of finances as our illustrious chair. I appreciate what he's doing because he wants to pass that on to everyone.
But I'm curious, is there a study, has a study been done, to determine where that debt is coming from?
We live in an age where we're bombarded with advertising, and it's so easy to get in debt. Is the problem because people are in financial difficulty? I guess that's not the right question. Is it because they're unemployed, or is it because we just spend too much money on areas where we shouldn't spend it?