I do, to some extent. We are very much in favour of immigration, of course. You cannot grow an economy unless you grow the population. Where it becomes a bit of a chicken-and-egg thing is that while we are working very hard to attract more people from outside—the gloom outside notwithstanding, this is a very beautiful place to live, and it doesn't need much to attract people—the issue is to retain them. We have not been that successful at retaining immigrants, and there is a reason. As Bill Clinton used to say, it's the economy. People may not come here because we have great health care, and people are not likely to come here because we have great restaurants. People will come and will stay because there is a stable economy that promises something to their children, so the issue is the economy.
We are essentially making a thousand little fixes around the economy that don't address the very core of the issue. We pay some of the highest taxes in the kingdom. We have heavy regulatory burdens. We have an aging population and a sicker population. The education standards, as has been pointed out, are slipping. Our youth, the very people who are born here, who are attached to that ocean, keep leaving, and with them leaves a high level of skills. We have low productivity. We have higher energy prices. All these things combined are essentially the culprits for seeing people leave. If we are unable to retain our own children, I think we are going to have difficulties retaining newcomers. The economy and all these things need to be addressed.