We can do a number of things, but I don't know whether we have enough time to discuss them today. Earlier I said that 40 percent of women over the age of 65 who lived alone were living in poverty. The only group representing a larger percentage is that of mothers who are the heads of single-parent families, more than half of whom live in poverty with their children.
I like the idea that you address the issue of women's insecurity in a comprehensive manner. We have to talk about the status of older women living in poverty today, but we also have to address that of women who live in poverty with their children and that of women who are in the labour market. I mentioned, among other things, the lack of child care services, which at times forces a woman to work part time or to accept a low-paying job because she's responsible for the custody of the children. The same is true of women entrepreneurs who don't have access to those services and who have to stay at home when they have a baby.