I think this ties back to what Armine was talking about earlier. Child care is going to improve productivity. If people have affordable, quality child care in place and their kids are well cared for, that improves productivity. If we have affordable public transit and active transit in livable cities, that improves productivity. It's easier for people to get to work. I agree, I think it's amazing that you were suggesting a four-day work week. People who have experimented with that find that, especially for office workers, you tend to make the work fit into the week. If you condense the week to four days, you get just as much done.
I think inequality is a drag. When they talked about the cuts to social services from the 1990s, we saw that impact on inequality in the 2000s. When people are stuck in low-wage jobs or on social assistance, they cannot contribute to society or increase their economic potential, for lack of a better word, or social potential. Those are the big things holding us back, and if we don't address those issues, we're not going to have a productive economy going forward.