The old way of getting data was to do a survey, and that's very extensive, especially if you have to do a detailed firm-level survey, and then it takes a lot of money and a lot of time to analyze the data, which is inevitably, if it's really fast, a year and a half out of date or so, and usually more, which often is inadequate.
In the meantime, Visa, just to pick a company, or Google, has information today about the purchases and the interests of people in the last hour. We need to look at labour market information that's in real time, and the only way to do that is by taking a completely different approach to assembling information, and that is by using what's generally called administrative data. This is not a simple thing to do and it's not inexpensive to develop, although once developed it's much cheaper to maintain. We need data, though, not only at what I call the wholesale level—that is, for researchers and for the federations and so on—but we also need labour market information for ordinary people in Canada.
I have one suggestion in all of the debate about the temporary foreign worker program. What if we had a website where anybody requesting a temporary foreign worker was required to post the job, so that job would be known to anybody in Canada who cared to look at the website? Why couldn't that technology be employed today, so that it would be available right now? As a suggestion, it's not particularly expensive.
I'll just say one more word. Those who remember their social history will recall that in the 1930s there was a demand for something called labour market exchanges, based on the fact people didn't know when and where a job was. So I'm suggesting the modern version of a labour market exchange, based on modern telecommunications technology. I think it's possible.