We have statistics, but nothing is conclusive. We don't, at least on the Labour Force Survey, have questions that would help us understand what barriers women and men face. There are some suggestive things, but we don't ask directly, “Why are you not working?” We don't ask, “Why did you not find a job?” Other surveys show that. Those that I'm familiar with, and the Labour Force Survey in particular, don't have that question.
But here's what we do know. What I said was that participation impacts your rate of unemployment. Women are much less likely to participate in the labour market than men, the main reason being that they're at home taking care of children. For some older women that's not necessarily the case, because that was the lifestyle at the time: the man went out to work and the woman stayed at home. So it's expressed in our surveys as sort of a personal preference. That's how that comes out.
I could expand. I don't have the statistics on me, but we can show you, for example, what the share of women is who are not unemployed and what they are doing. Are they at home? Are they going to school? You can get an idea from that what it is that's keeping them at home. Labour force participation rates among women who have children under the age of five are very, very low. Well, I shouldn't say that, because they're higher than they've ever been, but they're much lower than they are among men who have children of the same age.
That's the best I can do on that question right now, but we can look into it a little bit more.