Yes.
Of course, you're right, the decision to move depends on a number of factors. One of the factors is the trade-off. If I'm working here in Ottawa and there is another job in Toronto, then I need to decide whether the trade-off in terms of my salary and associated costs and leaving my community makes sense.
The first thing I want to say is that our research shows that there are a lot of factors. One of them is a sort of calculation of the costs and benefits, but I think it's important to note that there are a bunch of other factors that are not easily costed. For example, we know that two-parent families tend to be less mobile than single people. Our sense is that other factors come in, like attachment to community and attachment to local schools. So I just want to step back and say that the decision to move or not is based on a range of factors.
The second thing is cost. I'm not from the Department of Finance, but I know that there is a tax measure that assists individuals with expenses related to moving.
The third point is that our department has had a number of programs in place previously to help with the cost of moving for some individuals. Our program evaluations showed that those were very expensive programs and very ineffective programs in the sense that we tended, I think, in at least half the cases, to help people who would have moved anyway. It's an example of spending money where people would have otherwise made the move anyway.
I've answered some of the questions you raised. I don't know if I've answered all of them.