Measuring economic outcomes is probably one of the toughest things we do in this country. We have our central bank and countless others trying to measure that.
Having said that, when we were created, we started a process of trying to find ways to measure the northern economy, which I assure you is not like the rest of Canada. It is unique. If you visit our website—and I encourage you to have a look—you will see that we have a number of indices that we've actually built in order to follow unique aspects of the northern economy. The focus is not just about gross domestic product and not just about job creation but about earnings in households, knowing some of the socio-economic challenges, and looking at household creation in general.
We try to pull all that together to monitor those. Those are kinds of macro measures we use to follow the overall economy. We do that because, as an agency, as Ms. King said, our job is to follow all of that.
In addition to that, as we also noted in the opening statement, we measure all of our activities on a much more specific level. It would take too long to go through it all, but that's part of the job as well, not just the big picture but the small ones as well.