The one point of clarification I want to make is that the figures I presented earlier did not represent the result of the Canadian-born population's earnings. I was presenting the results of the immigrants' earnings upon arrival. So when I was talking about increasing the total number of immigrants impacting the earnings results of immigrants themselves, that's what I was referring to—not necessarily the impact on the Canadian-born population.
Now, the one caveat—and you hit upon it—is that in doing these types of studies, it has to be said that it's only representing the data we have access to, which is wage data. That is not a complete assessment of immigration policy, which needs to take into account the positive effect that family reunification has on individuals' well-being and on families' well-being.
The only trouble, as a lot of academics and institutes like mine will say, is that quantifying that is reasonably difficult, which is why I don't have any figures to present to you.