I can't specifically address that, just because our work focuses more on child and family poverty, but you'll see in the report card that we do have some information on inequality in terms of how the poorest 10% of families are doing versus the richest 10%, and that is also captured in the Growing Gap, Growing Concerns report.
Just going back to this issue of the cost, there are numerous sociological studies that look at that. If you have growing inequality in a society during a time of great economic boom, which is what we have, and if you have numbers.... These are true numbers from the last census: 47% of all new-immigrant children, children in families who have arrived in the past five years, live in poverty, and you'll see in the report card aboriginal poverty numbers. So with poverty numbers are disproportionately high among certain sectors of our society, there is a great risk at some point for social instability. A very vivid example of that, not to sound too extreme, is the race riots that were seen in Paris a couple of years ago, where new immigrants were obviously being very socially excluded and marginalized, and it erupts.
So again, if we're talking about costs and we're talking about investment, these are investments that need to be made in order to make a difference.