I'd like to speak to that for a moment, if I could.
The old antiquated notion that takes us back to the fifties is if you can play containment on this, so it's us and them, and if you just put those folks who are troubling us on the other side of the line over there, then those of us who are on this side of the line will be just fine. Hopefully, as we've grown as a nation we've started to understand that the more who are over there, the less who are over here. The simple reality is, if it's quality of life that you seek, if you're not all on the same side of the line, then everybody pays the price.
This is borne out again and again in the research, in the literature, in personal experience, in the voice that people give to their lived lives about what poverty has meant for them. So I think that's the starting point. Regardless of your political stripe, if it's thriving commerce that you're after, I would think that you'd want all individuals, all families, to be doing well. If it's quality of life exclusively that drives you, the same rule applies.
I think when we start to look from a policy perspective, and it goes back to the question that was asked a short while ago about measure, you can't just have a measure that's exclusively tied to income. It's got to be tied to somebody's ability to participate, to be engaged, and to subsequently thrive. What's interesting is here in Nova Scotia one of the holdouts used to be, many years ago, the corporate sector, which was very lean and mean in their perspective on this, and now they're way ahead in understanding that if we want folks to fill our trades, if we want folks to lend in a productive way to commerce, we can't afford to leave anybody behind--we can't afford to leave anybody behind.
Everybody knows what's happening with the population, not only in Nova Scotia but in Canada as a nation, so if for no other reason we have reason now to give pause and to take a serious look with an inclusive lens at how we do the work that needs to be done so everybody has access to opportunities to do something really meaningful with their lives.
There's a shift that's happening all around us, and I think one of the last areas to catch up is federally and provincially when we talk about policies on these issues.