The reality is that there's a giant gender wage gap out there. Women are just less wealthy. Those types of alternatives provide an easier way to fund where you live, or to fund having a car or sharing a car and all these different things.
If you go into these shared spaces where people are working nowadays, as opposed to having offices, I think we're seeing a lot of female entrepreneurs in those areas as well. It brings down the overall cost to fund your business, certainly, or to fund your life effectively too. Once you have children, you tend to be stuck in one location, though, so those benefits sort of go away.
One earlier point that I would pick up on in terms of funding for female entrepreneurs is that I spent two years in the venture capital industry. It's a massive problem. Only 4% of venture capital goes to female entrepreneurs. We need to think about that. A big part of the reason is that all of the partners in venture capital firms are men. They don't get the pitches that are coming in. I have seen them. They don't get it. They say, “I'll go home and ask my wife what she thinks.”
That's not the way we should allocate money. The government is giving money to all of these funds that I just mentioned. You need to think about where that government money is going, and whether you have any sort of diversity requirements around where the funding then goes to in the economy.