Thank you.
Mr. Hogue, at a previous meeting, the Parliamentary Budget Officer came to talk about an assessment of something he called—if memory serves—invisible homelessness. He was talking about people who, for example, live in their cars, or people forced to live three or four to an apartment to share the cost of rent, when this may not have been their game plan. In addition, let's not forget the French film Tanguy. Many young people are still living at home at the age of 25, 30 or 35. This seems to be a growing phenomenon. These young people don't have the means to buy their first home.
In your study, did you also observe or assess this phenomenon of children no longer leaving home?