I think a lot of us are talking about the social determinants of health. Sometimes it's too easy to say, “Oh well, it's poverty. It's unfortunate, but it's over there.” But there's a whole bunch of interconnections as well.
My background, as some of you know, is as a social worker. I primarily worked with street kids, but I also did financial assistance for a number of years. The reality is that you see people making life and death decisions about whether to take their medicine or not and whether to live in a rat-trap place or not. But even for some people who are not right on the edge of poverty, it's a matter of some small advance, some life of dignity. If we're just here to provide a pension plan to keep people down, I don't think that's what we really want. We want to know that our parents and grandparents, and indeed ourselves, will have some sense of dignity. So it is about social determinants of health, which is a pension plan.