I received today some data for Ontario. Let me share that with you.
Ontario university graduates actually have the lowest unemployment rates and the highest employment rates, according to data just released today. Ontario university grads have also the highest lifetime earnings, and 86% of recent graduates are working at jobs that require skills that require university. This is not just about engineering. University graduates overall, over time, are working maybe not in their fields but at jobs that require skills at a university level. It's much higher in engineering—I think this is well known—but the fact is that all university skills are required in the economy.
I'd like to address the question about 50-year-olds who may feel dispossessed by what's happening with our environment. I think there is some fear that this change could impact them and their families. To go back to one of the suggestions I made earlier, I do think we really need to have an ecosystem that's parallel to co-op. Rather than have students go out to work, we need to get experienced experts, experienced professionals, experienced non-professionals, to come back to campus, to be part of the ecosystem, to see what's going on, and to participate in the innovation process.
I think we need to have a two-way movement. We need to bring people in from the 50-year-old age group.