In terms of some of things you've talked about, one of the things that has been discussed is this concept of more income support being needed.
I've referred many times here to a study by a fellow named John Richards, who is a former provincial cabinet minister here in Canada who has done a study talking about the unintended consequences of increasing accessibility to welfare, almost in terms of its impact in increasing poverty. Actually, he more spoke of some of the cuts that have been made to the welfare system in some provinces in our country by various governments of different stripes and the impact those cuts in the welfare role had in actually decreasing poverty. What he referred to was this idea that for people who were able to work, once it was harder for them to get welfare, it encouraged them to go out and find work that was actually better than what they were receiving on welfare. In fact, the welfare dollars that they were receiving basically locked them into poverty in a sense; therefore, this concept of welfare had this unintended consequence of increasing poverty.
Can you maybe speak to that a little bit in terms of the potential unintended consequence of going down that road for that other 50% you were talking about?