With respect to high school education, when you look at those high-risk groups, the biggest factor is attachment to the labour force. It really is dramatic. It doesn't have to be that much attachment to the labour force, but just having some attachment to the labour force puts those high-risk groups on a level of low income that is comparable to other Canadians.
That said--and this is related--not having high school graduation dramatically increases the chances that you live in persistent low income. So it is very important, and it is a compounding issue as well.