My own two children are both in Calgary. They left Manitoba. I think there are a number of reasons that Calgary is a younger city, if I can put it that way, or a younger region.
Yesterday Dr. Emery referred to the need for capital requirements to make sure that there are investments in jobs and it's not all private. His reference was even to caregivers as jobs in some of those areas, and the public sector and that sort of thing.
Three different areas have attracted people to Alberta. Their birth rates are higher, as you've said, and national and international migration have impacted that. Obviously if there are increased birth rates, there are lots of youth. There's national migration because there are sometimes better wages, particularly in the oil sector, which was very capital intensive, and the international immigrants come in as well because, even with all of that, there's still a shortage of workers.
Can you elaborate as to how that formation of capital impacts the demographics of people moving within our country? Has that got something to do with it?