The answer is yes. The same evidence or research I was speaking to earlier shows that you're more likely to get a job in the profession you studied in if you have placements as an experiential learner.
On underemployment, you make a really good point. It's a key challenge for youth. It's part of what we're looking at in the renewal of the youth employment strategy, because there's this quality.... If you don't get a good job, there's a scarring effect—that's the term we use—in that it's hard to get out again. This is part of the reason we think programs like co-ops and placements get you in the door and get you into the right environment in the profession that you studied in. They're that first transition. That's why they're such important tools.
To come back to your question, I'm not sure I'm going to answer it directly, because—