If you're talking about immediately addressing low-skilled worker needs, you have all kinds of guest workers in Mexico with nothing to do. We could access a labour pool tomorrow if we put the rules in place.
The other piece of the puzzle is to remember that production and economic development don't just require labour. You can substitute capital for labour. Right now, we have rules that keep us from doing substitution on the necessary scale.
Those are two changes we could make within the next hour and a half to start responding to that need. And again, it's not just that we have a bunch of public servants who could be shifted to the private sector. In fact, as someone just mentioned, many of them are shifting now. When they retire, or are getting close to retirement and getting their buy-out packages, they're going off to the private sector. They're not getting on the yacht and just sailing around the Canso Strait.
We have a lot of people who are underemployed. We need to get the barriers out of their way and bring them into the workforce.