Okay. I hope that provides at least some insight in terms of how you've been able to pivot across the country, but I know that my friend from the Bloc is very passionate about this and I wanted to make sure he got the answer.
You'll note from my earlier interventions that I am trying to better understand the calculations, the formulas, the labour economics and economic theory that led to some of the outcomes that we've had. I asked about how Finance Canada had analyzed the impact of the proposed changes of the CERB on the labour supply and the incentive to return to work.
I recall my time at Acadia, doing economics there—not very well, but doing them—and trying to get a sense for how this is also used in other places, such as in the way we legislate people into poverty through low minimum wages, inadequate social assistance, inadequate disability supports and a push-and-pull into the economy. It feels like there is some of this calculus being done.
According to the OAG, Finance Canada has analyzed the interactions between the CERB and the wage subsidy. I am wondering how much interaction there was between the benefit and the subsidy—the back and forth, the push and pull of labour economics.