You're getting into political questions here, clearly, but if you're asking my personal opinion, I think it's vital to have this kind of documentation of women's inequality. If we don't have this information, then we can't lobby for change; we are not aware of what the differences are and where the inequalities exist.
The information I've just given on unemployment insurance, for example, forms part of a study I have just completed with another person for Status of Women Canada's policy research fund. It was scheduled for publication in March and now will no longer be published. Unfortunately, you will not have access to that information, unless I can find somebody else to publish it. It's really a shame that the kind of information you need to document, where you need to do your lobbying or make recommendations, will no longer be available.