Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I was struck by the fact that you have two basic measures of poverty. Correct me if I am wrong. On the one hand, you have the consistent poverty rate, which guides you and allows you to know where to intervene. On the other hand, you have the life cycle framework, that you use also, which is a concept with which we are not so familiar. It is rather interesting. It seems to me it allows you to track the evolution of poverty from childhood to old age, as well as the number of people who manage to escape from it.
If I understood you correctly, you are tracking this on the ground. If so, how do you do it? Let us take the example of a child whose parents have been able to provide him or her at some point with a better income or better living conditions. This individual will evolve later in life. Is he or she going to fall back into poverty? Is this what you are trying to track? Over the last ten years you have been able to put into place not only support for the poor but also methods to analyze the results. Could you tell me how you do that follow-up?