Recent analysis I have looked at on that topic suggests— for example, I mentioned at the beginning of my presentation the innovative work we're doing to try to understand pathways to education. In the Maritimes, we did that as our pilot. If you look at cohorts as they graduate, the 2006 cohort, the 2007 cohort, and so on, and you look at their first-year earnings in the labour market, you see that first-year graduates in the later cohort are earning less than those from the early cohort were earning.
It does appear from that study that it's taking longer for them to get into full-time, well-paying employment after graduation.