We're doing a study right now and we're using the general social survey, which looked at Canadians 45 years of age and over. We're looking at what happens after the caregiving is over. We've run some initial analyses, and we're finding that for women who retire to caregive, compared to women who retired for other reasons, the caregiving women's incomes are, on average, about $4,000 less than the women who didn't have to caregive. So it has an impact, a huge impact.
The dropout period isn't long enough to get rid of that period. They had children, and then they did this, and maybe they took care of their husband, who knows?