With all due respect, though, I think I'm going to disagree. I'm hoping Mr. Braniff has a different view. The reason is that, yes, they may be able to save some, but it depends on how much pension they have and whether they're very high, or medium, or low. Their savings will be dependent on that.
I've seen senior women I've worked with who do deplete savings very quickly, because housing is high and they still have to pay the same rent if they're living in an apartment. They have medicines, attendant care, and what have you. It doesn't really go to the core of what I consider to be women's economic security. Saying they will actually save is like going on a hope and a wing and a prayer, and we don't know whether they will save to the extent we think they should save, because when people are healthy, they tend to not always think about that. Hopefully, after one passes on, the other one has saved enough.
Mr. Braniff, do you agree that it should be...or were you talking about pension splitting the way I mean it? I'm trying to clear this one, because it's not---