I think the most important thing to do is to get women into a position of complete parity when it comes to paid work. Just with respect to Alberta, I did a small pay equity exercise to look at the overall revenue impact of doing that. One of the slides that I copied into the handout demonstrates this. Between the reduction in transfer payments that need to be directed to low-income individuals and the increased revenues, it's actually a money-maker just to promote gender equality.
To your first point, I don't agree that going for growth in the single-minded way that Canada has done for so long, and which other countries have done as well, is a little of the problem. It is the core of the problem, because it has completely turned upside down the priorities of most governments, who seem to feel that their main goal is to feed and nurture the corporations within their jurisdictions to a greater extent than they feed and nourish the human beings who are the source of all wealth.
Most of the OECD countries and other big think-tank organizations, including the IMF, have come to the realization that in fact single-mindedly going for growth is absolutely the wrong thing to do, and that what needs to be done is to go back to the sustainable development goals, the Paris agreement, the Beijing requirement—