The answer is that once we get beyond, I would say, about a two-year horizon, you're at the point where it's only long-term structural things that are in the forecast tool kit.
For an economist, it would be asking what the demographic picture looks like, how many people are either arriving as immigrants or being born here and therefore how much the labour force is growing, and what companies are doing to the capital stock. That analysis, for us, given that we're at the back end of the baby boom and people are retiring, is that we believe that the Canadian economy is capable of long-term growth, a little below 2%, for a long, long time.
That's where that kind of analysis comes from. To go out 50 years or something, you would have big demographic-type cycles, perhaps, superimposed on that, which I have not done for you.
Those kinds of long-term determinants we can think of almost as constants. They only move very, very gradually. For us, what we want over the next two years is to be above that 2% growth so we can close the excess capacity gap. That will give us all the job growth and get people who may have lost their jobs back reintegrated into the workforce. When we get there, everything settles there at around or a little below 2%.