I think on the government side, what it indicates is that we need to focus in two areas. First of all, we have to do everything we can to enable every single Canadian to achieve his or her full potential, and that takes us into areas like education, like training, issues that are not just federal in jurisdiction but that are a national problem. I think this is an area where we've always felt that government has a moral responsibility to make sure that no Canadian is left behind. This is becoming an economic imperative as well.
So developing the talent we have in this country already is the first line of policy priority.
I think the other one is that we've always been a country that depends on immigration as a source of talent, as a source of labour, as a source of citizens, and the fact is we can't count on attracting the degree of immigration we've had in the past, even though we need it more. So I think we have to be much more aggressive at the government level in terms of marketing to potential immigrants, encouraging people to come here, and certainly enabling employers to recruit and bring people into this country more easily when there are jobs to be filled that we can't find people for. And we need to do a much better job of helping people when they get here. Once they have moved into our communities, we need to make sure they are able to integrate into the economic mainstream as quickly as possible. This includes a whole range of community-based as well as national and provincial policies.