Mr. Busby, I want to make a statement and then see how you would respond to it.
There is the idea of the optimum number of immigrants that Canada could absorb in any given year. The current government says they're looking at 250,000 to 260,000. Canada as a nation has grown, and so has our economy. Some of the most successful numbers of immigrants, in per capita terms, came during the nineties, not in the last year or two. I know that might shock a few people around here. It is because it's based on the percentage of the population. It's based on the mixture. If you bring in 200,000 from one category, that doesn't necessarily represent a healthy immigration policy. You have to have a good mixture--the right number of grandparents, parents, investor groups, economic class, and so forth.
Would you not agree with the importance of the mixture? If we get the mixture right, could it be argued that you could achieve 1% as a target, something we have passed previously and I think we could achieve again?