Can I just interrupt you for a second? While you were speaking, you gave me a question to ask you.
The same survey, further down, talks about something you mentioned. Fifty-six per cent believe that their children's generation will have a worse future than they did. That's true for people in eastern, central, and western Europe. It's almost a constant. Is it the same case in Russia? Do Russian parents believe their children's generation will be worse off?
You said their capacity for hardship is perhaps higher than that in Europe. They are able to sustain that for longer, or there is a perception that they may be able to do so. In the Russian context, do they believe that their current government will lead them to a better economic future, with less unemployment, less social inequity, and fewer migration issues?