Absolutely. I know you've had Armine Yalnizyan and Kathleen Lahey come in, and they gave their testimonies about women's contribution to the economy, either through caregiving, unpaid labour, or paid labour.
To cut it down to brass tacks, if you give funds to people who have low incomes, whether they're women or men, they aren't going to be investing it overseas. The money probably won't find itself in a tax haven in the Cayman Islands. It will be spent on necessities in their communities and in their local economies. That has a multiplier effect, because if you're spending in your home communities, then you're supporting local economies and supporting jobs in your own communities. That's the multiplier effect.
If you give the money to people who are going to spend it on necessities, it's going to stay in their communities.