I wish I could.
Mr. Cuzner, thank you for asking that question. That is perhaps the most important question this committee could answer. I've been actually quite nuanced. We politicians don't do nuance very well—let's admit it. At least I don't. But I've made an exception in this case to actually be nuanced and say that there's something going on here that I don't fully understand, because you're absolutely right: the Don Drummond and the TD reports and the Institute for Research on Public Policy—I could give you a long list—say that based on the aggregate StatsCan labour market information, there is not evidence of acute labour shortages now or in the forceable future. And yet, Mr. Cuzner, every single employer I meet—from the fish processing plant operators in your area to the people in the service industry and the computer gaming industry in Montreal and the IT industry in Toronto, to the agricultural operators in the west and those in the major construction industry—says their number one challenge is skills shortage. Cumulatively, I don't believe those organizations are lying. I don't believe they're making it up—