Thank you for that question.
The way we come at [Technical difficulty—Editor] is we do an annual survey of the typical consumption of the Canadian household. That is then used to weight components of the CPI. We do this now on an annual basis. The last one showed without a question that shelter costs make up about 30%, if you like, of the weight of that basket, and as I mentioned earlier, that has various subcomponents—household operations, furnishings and equipment—which are just about under 15%. We talked earlier about the replacement component, and so on.
Then, of course, we do have other measures that we look at. When we compare it to the median income of a particular household, at what point do those basic costs then put them in core housing need? When those costs increase above that rate, then we deem that household and every member within that household to be in core housing need. The last figure we had was that about 10% of Canadian households were in that position where it was felt they were spending a disproportionately high portion of their income on shelter costs, compared to the income—