Thank you very much.
I will finish my time with you, Mr. Laurin. I have so many questions to ask you.
You have probably studied public policy history a little, specifically in terms of the Canada Pension Plan.
The arguments that we hear at the moment, including from my colleague, are the same as we heard when the program was improved in the 1990s in order to deal with the long-term situation. Actually, they are the same arguments that we heard in 1965 when the Canada Pension Plan was created.
Each time that we talk about a program like this, we always have to deal with the same concerns. In 1965, people said that it was going to be disastrous for business. They said the same thing in 1996 or 1997 when it changed.