You often start with a premise about falling real wages, for example. The fact of the matter is that economists would take that apart; we'd like to see whose real wages are falling.
I'm worried, for example, about immigrants, who have not made progress in Canada in 25 years; if you start to segment the decline in real wages, I'm obviously concerned about that. I'm concerned about aboriginal communities. I am concerned about organized labour in sectors where we have chosen to go to global free trade, like the auto industry. We have seen the massive layoffs this week, but that is almost, unfortunately, a natural consequence of exposing a once protected industry to international trade when technology is the driver. The Japanese companies that have invested in Canada are outperforming the big three fundamentally because they have a product that people want to buy.
I think we have to understand why the real wages are falling and really drill into some of the subcomponents.