Well, your diagnosis is quite correct. The human capital problem we have here will not be solved by immigration alone. We need to bring people with disabilities, aboriginal people, males who drop out of school, and basically rural areas into the workforce.
The good news about aboriginal employability is that when aboriginal people have degrees, they are as employable as anyone else, and it's been shown to be so. The participation rate of aboriginals in trades and community colleges is as high as non-aboriginals.
The bad news is that we have very little idea of what's happening, and I again come back to monitoring and reporting. In fact, when we released our report on the state of learning in Canada last month, we had a chapter on aboriginal learning. We also have a knowledge centre on aboriginal learning located in Saskatchewan, and it's a national knowledge centre. We could report very little about aboriginal progress in learning, because the data aren't there and the analysis is not there.