No. First of all, the Women in Canada report was really intended largely to be an on-shelf database for women and men, people across the country, working in the areas of gender, and studying and working in those areas. We have 300 or 400 series in the publication, so there really wasn't time to look at the reasons for why these trends were happening. But yes, I think that's one of the two or three real questions that come out of here.
What we're not seeing at this point in time is a payoff in terms of better jobs and higher incomes among these young women who have much better educations right now than their young male counterparts.
We also did another study in coordination with Status of Women a couple of years back where we looked at women who were around 25 years of age in 1976 and their daughters, just to track the changes. It was called A Quarter Century of Change: Young Women in Canada in the 1970s and Today. Again, one of the conclusions we came to was that there does not seem to be this payoff for increased education on the part of these young women.
Why that would be I'm not sure. Is it going to be the case that in a short period of time the baby boomers are going to start to retire and then they're going to take off? That's a possibility. Certainly one of the things we hope for, in a report like Women in Canada, is that it will spur further research. That's certainly one of the questions that really is very obvious and needs some further research, yes.