Yes, Mr. Leung, you know this as well as any of us around the table. We have the most qualified workforce we've ever had in Canada, the most educated. We even beat the rest of the world by many measures, but that means—when you have people with university degrees and a huge number who have at least completed high school—people can and have learned other languages and there is a hunger to learn both our official languages and then to learn third and fourth languages.
That's why the discussion about official languages in this country is more positive than ever before. People see second, third, and fourth languages as assets, as never before.
We also do presentations to employers emphasizing the benefits of bilingual and francophone employees. We have lots of data that shows how those with both official languages tend to do better in the labour market. They have more employment opportunities. They can be rewarded.
It's not the same everywhere, but generally the data shows that it's good to have these two languages. I think newcomers understand this very well, including those from India and China, who are sending their kids to immersion, who are sending their kids into the French system, even in the greater Toronto area.