My sense is that there is a comparatively small number of people, of those 300,000, who at this stage are making the calculation to return to Canada in the near future. As things develop, if the economy collapses, if the political situation deteriorates, if there is anything even approximating a Tiananmen Square-style kind of violence, they'll want to leave.
Many of those people are calculating their economic prospects, and the economic situation in Hong Kong is beginning to turn. One of the parts of mainlandization is the growing integration into a Chinese economy that is responding faster, in a post-COVID world, than ours is here. Not all of those 300,000 are going to be seeking refuge. They'll be calculating.