I'll stop you there because the time allotted to us is limited. I understood your reasoning enough to know where you stand on that idea.
There is another idea that surprises me somewhat, but, at all events, that should be clarified as well. It's a fact that single individuals are more inclined to experience financial difficulties. We agree on that. But you're saying that one of the effective measures is to encourage those people to marry. To that end, you even advocate a marriage bonus, and you also urge the government to offer a tax deduction to people who marry. That defeats me.
I want to try to understand how you can reconcile that with the deployment of modern society. Furthermore, we will acknowledge that we are no longer living in those times when people were compelled to marry. I believe you'll acknowledge that. We can't compel people to marry, unless you tell me the contrary. There remains only one step to take, and I believe you've taken it: you're saying that we shouldn't compel them, but we should urge them to marry—ah!
How can we accept that and want to make it a recommendation that will be helpful for the future? I don't know whether you really understand my question. Here we want to neglect no suggestions in our analysis, but we also want to accept suggestions that are really consistent with our objective.