That's universal. It doesn't matter what your income is. One of the things we suggested was that you might want to sweep some of that forward and give somebody in the first two years the option of taking that money in the first two years and not looking to take it later on.
In other words, they've put it together to give themselves a supplementary income early on, which they take, on balance, because they'd like to stay at home for a year or two before then possibly going out to work again. To give them that extra bit of income enables them to do that without too much hardship, recognizing that after three or four years they won't get the child benefit at all and they'll be at work by that stage.
Now, child benefit, I know, is enough to buy certain things. It's not huge, but compressed together, 10 years of it brought forward into the first year or something, actually would then give them quite a more significant purchasing power at that period. Little things like that we were talking about, to give people--