One thing that we haven't talked about today is something called the nutritious food basket. It is, I would think, an absolute measure of poverty in terms of healthy eating. It's not very widespread in Canada. There have been nutritious food baskets created for Toronto, for Edmonton, and possibly for Hamilton, and a few other municipalities across the country.
I don't want to compare it with Mr. Sarlo's way of measuring absolute poverty, but it is certainly something to look at. It's something that we use a lot in looking at the role of nutrition in health, the role of health in relation to poverty, and then we get into the whole conversation about what are the social determinants of health. That's another thing we haven't talked about today—