It actually says some pretty good things about women. I think that sometimes we focus on the five subpopulations, and we don't step back and look at some of the gender analysis, but we actually did for this. What we're seeing is actually a greater improvement in rates of low income for women over men. They're improving their situation faster than men are. We're now seeing a lessening of the gap between men and women, and the MBM clearly shows that.
So it's positive, even in the trend groups in which we might think they would still be disadvantaged. So for lone parents, which are 95% women, we are seeing dramatic increases. The numbers are still high. I think it is something like 32% for lone-parent families led by women, but that's a 10% drop in the rates over eight years ago.
We are seeing some fairly dramatic improvements for women overall. We are seeing a closing of the gap between men and women in terms of poverty measurement rates. So by and large, it's a fairly positive story.