I think it's a question of 10 minutes.
Almost all the plans everywhere internationally, from Burkina Faso to Sweden, have gender equality as a central tenet of an anti-poverty strategy. It's part of the UN framework for doing things. I don't see why Canada would want to do anything different. Most of the publications we produce, wherever we can, things are aggregated by sex, family type, all those things. We have a wealth of information. We need to use it more.
If I can take one more second, the other critical element that very often doesn't get factored in but is key to the gender equation, is having time-use statistics. Canada has tremendous capacity in that regard too, and we don't use them well enough. And this is the conundrum for most single parents. It's the trade-off between time and money. They don't have enough time to make money, and unless that's factored in, you're going to have real trouble finding workable solutions.