Yes, the populations of poor provinces are on average more vulnerable than wealthier provinces, in a way, when we talk about the negative effects of inflation, in a sense. You could say that.
Regarding migration, you raise a very important issue. I think equalization, implicitly at least, is partly about helping people stay where they live by providing them with relatively good public services for a tax burden that's not excessive. By helping poorer provinces offer decent services to their inhabitants, you could say that it probably makes it easier for them to keep their people. People can leave their province for different reasons—because of job opportunities elsewhere and so forth, or a lack of job opportunities at home—but we don't want people to leave their province because the social and health services are so bad that they need to move to a another part of the country to access decent services.
Equalization is part of the tools that we have to prevent that.