Well, it's a very challenging question. And the point I was trying to make was I don't think there is any easy quick fix for us to do this in a reasonably short timeframe and in a way that will not affect, in one way, shape, or form, the already growing problem we have, not just with the backlog--as I said, that is one problem with the immigration system--but with the growing gap between earnings results for newly arrived immigrants and the Canadian-born. You simply can't do one by increasing the numbers too much or expanding the level of total immigrants without significantly hurting the other.
What I am thinking is that while they have put the recent cap on the number of potential applications, that seems to me like some sort of forward progress, in the sense that you can't really start to get rid of the backlog, and you can't even start to allocate a marginally larger share of the total immigrants toward family class unless you start to put in place some type of system like that.
As painful as I think it is going to be, I only see progress taking place on this front in very small increments. And if you want to make those large increments, if you want to expand the numbers to significant levels like I was proposing, then you have to be prepared that there will be other consequences as well to those policies. I have to keep pointing the finger back at the point that we are seeing extraordinarily large growth in the divergence of earnings results for immigrants and the Canadian-born population, and that's not a problem we want to see grow.