This raises a very important concern around affordability and post-secondary education.
There has been a decrease in government funding to universities over the last couple of decades. Students have been increasingly paying higher tuition. Also, importantly, international students have been paying significantly higher tuition as well, because very often they're unregulated by the government, whereas domestic students have legislated caps in their provinces for what they can pay for tuition.
With the increases in tuition and the fact that students often enter the housing market at the going rate—so they pay higher costs for housing—students are having an affordability crunch. That goes for undergraduate students as well as the graduate students we're talking about today.
One of the reasons we are focusing specifically on the graduate scholarships and the post-doctoral fellowships is that these awards are seen as the benchmark. They are the most prestigious awards you can get as a student in Canada. It's very difficult for students who are then hired under professors or by their universities to advocate to be paid more money. We think this is an example of where a rising tide will lift all boats. If these scholarships are increased, other students will then benefit from that investment as well.