I think that's an absolutely critical issue. When you go back to 2011 and how is it that Egyptians understood and what it was that they did in 2011, they often talk about it as a revolution of the youth, and the youth who were.... In a sense, there was a generational change in Egypt. This generation of youth was going to be much less deferential, but there was also a strong sense that the society had failed its youth. It was providing bad education. It was not providing housing. It was not generating jobs at the level at which it was producing children.
As a result, this was not simply an unemployment problem, but a particularly severe unemployment problem among Egyptian youth and those people who wanted to enter the labour market, and really at all levels, including people who were well qualified and at college graduate levels. There was a sense in 2011—again, this was primarily youth who led the revolution—that the political system had failed them, that they needed to build a new political system, one that was responsive not to the needs of a few officials, or the president, or the narrow group around him, but to the broader society.
I think an awful lot of the disillusionment in Egypt with the current state of the political process is that it simply hasn't led in that direction at all. They've managed to bring down the old rule, but they do not have a political system that is capable, at least so far, of generating employment opportunities for this generation of Egyptian youth that led the revolution.