Thank you. That's the clarification I needed, based on a comment. I wanted to make sure I was accurate.
My second question is centred again around CPP. I'm looking at CPP as being something that's there, something that could be utilized, yet it doesn't recognize the economic value of work women do at home. Could either one of you comment on that, how we could come up with some solutions so that problem could be addressed?
I know many women, as you said earlier, are penalized because they made a choice to stay at home. I had an aunt who put my uncle through university. He was a nuclear physicist, so he was in university for an awful long time. She was a relatively uneducated woman, but extremely intelligent, and as you related these testimonies today it reminded me of several instances where this has happened.
Could you comment on the CPP?