If I may, before we go to Mr. Bleyer, I was also going to ask him a question. I'll let him answer both what you referred him to and also the issue around competitiveness and the Canadian economy.
I ran a social enterprise before I was elected to Parliament. Universal health care provided a benefit of $3,000 per year, per employee. That is a major competitive advantage that is often not mentioned around this table.
Mr. Bleyer, you mentioned issues like single-payer pharmacare, and we've been talking about child care. These are all competitive advantages to Canadian businesses, because it means that their costs, if they're treating their employees effectively, are taken away and provided for as part of a generalized system. That's a major competitive advantage.
Could you speak to that as well, as you mention the figures, in terms of what that would meaningfully mean in an attempt by the federal government to reduce poverty in Canada?