Yes. I think the number you suggest is not an unreasonable one in terms of how much we could end up losing this year, but what will happen is that we're going below capacity, and as I said, we're going to be in a disinflationary zone. It means that the economy will be able to grow faster than its potential for a while in order to make up that lost ground, just to get us back, in level terms, to that full employment place where we were just a few months ago.
Yes, of course it's possible that there will be some structural effects to the economy to change that, but there are also arguments for there to be positive structural effects. The types of innovation you've seen during this crisis are the sorts of things that raise productivity long term. I wouldn't put that as an impossible thing either. In the end, I'm quite confident that we will make up that lost ground, but don't hold me to a timeline. It's going to take something that we measure in, say, a couple of years.