Thank you.
Let me start from the beginning, then, and make it very clear.
Yes, I can appreciate people's decision to move as an economic, social, cultural decision and everything else. I guess the point here, from the point of view of the policies that I would recommend...I'm not saying people should move, but the issue is, should you ask people elsewhere in Canada to pay the unemployment insurance for people who don't want to move? Obviously, if people don't want to move for their own family circumstances, that's their choice and they should make it. But the person who fights traffic for an hour and a half, or rides the subway in Toronto or has two jobs, earns $35,000 a year and is paying $800 a year in unemployment insurance.... If he's a policeman or a fireman or a TTC driver, he'll probably never collect unemployment insurance; he's paying $800.
The point is, should you continue, and to what extent should you continue, to ask other Canadians to pay that unemployment insurance to people who stay in unpromising labour markets when today, in an unprecedented amount in Canada, there are opportunities in other markets? I think that's really the issue.