Thanks.
I don't know if I am really the right person to talk about women entrepreneurs as my organization represents workers specifically.
I will say that the things we are advocating, in terms of certain key aspects of a feminist recovery, include quality public services that would benefit all Canadians, whether they are small business owners, single individual entrepreneurs, or workers—whether unionized or non-unionized.
When you have quality public services like child care, long-term care and home care, these things will actually help to relieve the burden of unpaid care work that women disproportionately share. I think we could start to think, really, about what the things are that our society needs to keep our economy running, those things that lay across the surface.
Public services and the care economy are both sources of jobs, but they're also economic generators. They're the things that we need to be able to function as a society and to care for those who are most vulnerable. I think those are the kinds of investments we would like to see, a conversation that we would like to see happen, and that's why we're calling for a commission.