Maybe I'll start and then Daniel can add to it.
The government is obviously very interested in jobs and the impacts of the economic action plan. As the minister indicated this morning, the plan is much more than just infrastructure. There are tax credits. There are training programs. There are a number of initiatives.
There are a couple of ways...and I think the job impact was presented in the last report to Parliament tabled in the House. There was a whole chapter there. The Department of Finance is leading the analysis across the government on the entire job impact of the economic action plan. The report indicates that there can be challenges if you try to do it on a project-by-project basis and then add up all the numbers, for a number of reasons, such as consistency and interpretation. Again, you're not going to get part of the action plan that is not project-based. As well, you're not going to capture indirect and induced jobs. I may be able to ask my contractor how many people he hired, but he's going to have no idea how many jobs were created by the asphalt company, by the person who built the sewer pipes, by the truck driver who delivered them. So you don't get a complete picture.
The government's approach was to do modelling. That analysis was presented in the last report, and actually we appeared with Finance last year at the government operations committee, where they explained and presented it.
I don't know if you want to add anything on your side.