Understood.
Another point that has been made with respect to productivity is that the highest productivity is in the cities. This is not to take anything away from all the innovations happening outside the cities, but that's where the incubators are, where the software companies are and so on and so forth. The argument has been made that zoning policies—and this links to the housing crisis—are making it hard for labour to migrate to the cities to work in the more productive industries. There was an article about this in The Globe and Mail last week.
Do you not think, therefore, that it's wise for our government to be focused on incentivizing municipalities to make their zoning laws more flexible so that more people could be living in the cities, where the higher-paying, more productive jobs are?