I'd like to come to another issue. On Monday we had the ambassador from Chile testify before us, and he talked about the importance of not treating trade in isolation, that in fact what's happened under a much more progressive government in Chile now is that they are taking trade and the economy on a parallel track and engaging in a very targeted social policy initiative to try to reduce income inequality. In Canada, of course, we're seeing rising income inequality. We're now at the same stage we were in the 1920s. In fact, for most Canadian families their income has actually fallen since 1989, since the first Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement was signed.
Are there components within your report, either current or coming, that deal with that issue of ensuring that social policy addresses income inequality, so that we actually have prosperous communities?
And secondly, when we look at the human development index, which includes the standard of living and the overall quality of life, most of the countries that score at the very top are social democratic countries--in other words, countries that have not simply abandoned everything to the market but have integrated their social policies, including investment in education, as you've mentioned, and health care, which is a major source of competitive advantage for Canadian companies because we subsidize health care with our public system. Are there parts of your report that deal with those issues—social policy and income inequality—and with having an overall comprehensive policy, so we don't continue going down the same trail we've gone the last 15 years, which is more inequality, more poverty, more homelessness, and fewer social programs?