Yes, we'll turn to Mr. Atherton for those employment insurance data.
Quickly, on your first remarks about literacy, it's essentially correct that Canada's literacy results have not markedly changed in a decade. I can confirm that.
With respect to underemployment, I won't be able to give you an answer that does justice to it, but there is a great deal of information on it. There are many aspects to your question.
There is often a mismatch between the skills and the experience of the individual and their employment. For example, you will find people with higher educational credentials than needed for the employment they are doing. That's one example of a mismatch. And there are many reasons for it. As always in life, there is not one simple issue there. Sometimes the mismatches are regional, sometimes it's the individual's choice because they've changed their field, and sometimes it's poor performance of the labour market.
Underemployment, in the sense of those who have part-time employment, is in most cases voluntary. Most part-time employees are part-time because they choose to be. They're balancing home and work, or they're students balancing study and work. But part of part-time employment is involuntary. They are individuals who would rather have a full-time job.
There is also precarious employment. A growing phenomenon, of course, is to have contract employment or temporary employment, and some of those individuals obviously would prefer the greater stability or certainty of a permanent job or some of the other benefits that go with permanent employment. But in the modern economy we are seeing much more temporary employment as a phenomenon.
There is a great deal of information on these various subjects, Ms. Savoie.