It's perhaps a question a little bit higher and broader than my role. I would only reiterate that the provincial nominee programs are now very large, and the provinces decide how to use them. In scale, they are beginning to approach the federal skilled worker program in many ways, and the current approach of the federal government is that it's important to maintain a broad national program.
Yes, we have regional economic differences, but we're also a single labour market with full internal mobility rights. Canadians migrate a great deal within the country, and more and more so. We do see a value in a large federal program that brings in generic, if you will, highly skilled people, who are by definition energetic and ambitious for their families because they're prepared to move around the world to meet their needs.