That's an interesting question. This was one thing that led us, when we were building the community accounts, to put in an organizational framework for the data. When you talk about people who are interested in labour market-related data, for instance, that was one area we specifically gave a lot of thought to.
It goes back to what I said earlier. If you ask people what they want, quite often they don't know. Economists have ways of thinking about this. We look at our labour market and our labour market participants in a certain way. A lot of this is quite simplistic, as you'd be aware: males, females, age, wage rates, and so on. There are many other categories.
We began to set the data up so that those kinds of data were readily available. Instead of leaving people saying that they want to know what the unemployment rate is but would like to know more about the labour market and skills and what type of people are in the community and so on, we set it up along the lines of how an economist would think of it, which is basically as a description of the way the world works. That was very helpful to people for understanding what kind of occupations people are in now in our communities.
There are a couple of other things that we're doing as a government. One of them is obviously.... With our tight labour markets in recent years, it's a big issue. What we've been doing is developing occupational profiles for people in different occupations. We're also now building occupational projection models, whereby we take the forecasts we do at our branch, look at labour demand, and then look at labour supply and at where the mismatches are and provide occupational profiles—for individuals, to say where the jobs might be; and of course for companies, to give them a better sense of where the labour markets might be tight.
On that particular subject, it's not difficult to provide general information so that people can understand what is happening in communities from a labour market perspective. But when you start moving forward and asking about companies, or when you dig into the industries and that sort of thing, it requires a variety of measures, really.