Thanks very much.
I agree, in fact, that investing in social housing could be deflationary, because it could bring the cost of rent down if you balance the supply and demand equation. The one challenge you have is that if you invest more quickly than the sector can build, it could, in theory, have an inflationary impact, but my view is that we are not in that position today.
A short answer to your question is that I want to significantly increase the proportion of non-market homes in this country. We have not formally broadcast an official target as the Government of Canada. As we work towards releasing new measures in the new year, that is an exercise that I wish to undertake and to share publicly the details of, but not having completed the consultation phase of that conversation, I don't want to prejudge the outcome of the conversations I would have.
Striving for the OECD average seems like one reasonable bar to seek to meet, but until I have an opportunity to engage more broadly with the sector to identify what the appropriate goal for Canada should be and on what timeline, I hesitate to broadcast anything in advance of establishing a formal goal.