We don't explicitly model the labour market when we do a trade policy assessment. Essentially, the focus of our analysis is on the reallocation of resources within the economy. We start with a specific level of employment, which is the current level of employment, and there is some movement in the labour market, but relatively small within the model. That's not the focus of our analysis. Essentially as long as one has aggregate GDP gains, one can assume that this will lead to increased employment. Indeed, in the past we've talked about jobs-equivalent: a GDP gain of x will generate, on average, y, that specific level—
On October 6th, 2016. See this statement in context.