Perfect.
What I was hoping you would talk about is the strategic planning needed to accommodate 500,000 new residents, specifically with regard to housing.
I'm not just talking about economics, because a happy worker is a worker who can not only put bread on the table, but also find suitable housing. If he falls ill, he must be able to get proper hospital care. His children must be able to attend a school that is not overcrowded.
So we need to invest in schools, in hospitals and in building housing. We need a long-term vision. As it happens, all of these areas are the responsibility of Quebec and the other Canadian provinces.
So you're saying that Canada, like the McKinsey company—that's what Mr. Dominic Barton said when he appeared before this committee—has thought first and foremost about the economy and productivity, before thinking about the basic needs of these 500,000 people who enter the country every year. This number is in fact a minimum, because the target is 1.25% of the total population.
What is the strategic plan for receiving these people? Do we welcome them by asking the provinces to cope somehow, while demonstrating that they are not capable of managing the situation?
The cause of the problem is that the basic needs of these people were not taken into consideration before letting them in.