Thank you very much.
Ms. Houle, we hear a lot—and there's some truth to this, for sure—that wherever you are on the housing spectrum today, there's a need for more supply. However, I think the danger is that certain types of supply are more likely to emerge organically, particularly various forms of market housing, and then there are kinds that require government investment to make them work. Those are various types of affordable and social housing.
I think sometimes when we hear, as we did earlier, “supply, supply, supply”, any type will do and we should not worry if we build more supply at the high end as the benefits will trickle down to the people at the bottom, there's the potential that we don't really address an important aspect of the housing crisis in Canada. I wonder if you can speak a bit to that supply question. Do you think it's adequate just to say we should build more supply, no matter what kind, or do you think there has to be discrimination within the types of supply, particularly for the focus of public policy?