Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to our witnesses this morning for taking the time to shed some light on this rather diverse sector of our economy.
First of all, for the purposes of our discussion, when we start looking at various components of the service sector, pitting one against the other, trying to determine where one group of jobs fits, and so on, that can end up being a very difficult thing to track.
I can see there's a perception that somehow when job losses happen in one sector and move to another, they will only go to the low-paying portion of the service sector. In fact, quite the reverse is true. We have some stats here from October showing 66,000 new jobs in health care, social services, other services, and public administration.
That supports what you've said, Mr. Wright, on slide seven, that while retail trade has the greatest amount of increase, look at the top several others before you hit accommodation and food. So we have to deflate this myth that somehow manufacturing jobs are only going to the low end of the sector. I think it would also be true that if one looked at the diversity of sectors, even in manufacturing alone, there would be components in the lower end of the wage scale. So every sector has their highs and lows. I think we have to keep this at the higher level and look at what we're doing here.
I have a couple of specific questions for you, Mr. Wright. I wasn't sure where a couple of sectors would show up, and one was the building trades sector. Would that be in wholesale or part of the service sector?