I do agree with the Bouchard commission in many ways. It's important to recognize, as was just said, that in some fields, particularly high-demand technical fields, the majority of graduate students, especially at the Ph.D. level, are in fact international students who don't qualify for tri-council scholarships. Even for the Canadian students, though, the majority are paid out of research grants, so obviously, increasing tri-council scholarships....
I mean, it's absurd to me that a highly qualified master's student good enough to get a scholarship gets paid less than minimum wage, but you have to remember that for the majority of graduate students and post-doctoral fellows, they're paid out of research grants. You address only part of the problem by increasing these scholarships. We underperform in Ph.D. production. If we don't create jobs for Ph.D.s in Canada and increase the number of Ph.D.s, then we're going to continue falling behind in innovation.