Okay. I guess the short answer would have to be that by relying solely on one tool, whether it is the total immigration level or especially with the effects that we saw in the academic studies that we performed.... And we track data on all immigrant arrivals to Canada. So by looking historically at the results of what the largest policy change was with respect to immigration over the last 15 years, and that was the expansion of the economic class share within the total level of immigrants coming to Canada, without that increase taking place--where it has now gone up to 60% or 65% from what was once 40%--the types of earnings differentials between immigrants and the Canadian-born would have grown even bigger than what they were and what we saw.
I guess the short answer is yes, I'd like to see a mixture of tools and a long time horizon reasonably put on trying to get rid of this backlog. But you still need the resolve to get it done. So at the end of the day, I, like Mr. Noorani, believe that we can rely on a bolstered point system that more intelligently applies weights to skills we're looking for to prevent this type of situation from happening in the future.