I think it's important to say first of all that in the near term you are talking about competing for immigration. That is the solution that can fix things over the near term. Over the longer term, there's no question that there are opportunities to increase productivity as well. We're going to need both. We need to look at productivity.
From the perspective of the Canadian Home Builders' Association, we now have our own modular housing construction council, which looks at more factory-built housing and that kind of thing, which is purely a reaction to.... Since the Second World War, there's been this thought that factory-built housing would be the way, but the fact of the matter is that site-built construction is hyper-hyper-efficient and very cost-effective. But when you start to run into labour shortages over time—this will probably continue, and the demographics will probably support it—it makes more sense to look at more and more factory-built componentry. That's sort of the longer game, but we will have a long-term need for the workers as well, and immigration has to be part of that solution.