To be quite honest with you, I'm not entirely sure if there is a published study. Patrick may have a better sense of that.
The statistics we used actually came through Brian Forbes, who is a lawyer working with War Amps. What he was doing was comparing the average settlement to the average payment out for similar injuries in the Canadian Forces. That's where the 50% figure came from. It was an amalgam of court settlements and out-of-court settlements and so on for very similar injuries. So that's where that figure came from.
The other figure that concerns us though is when you take the pension that is paid at 75% of your base income at the time the injury was sustained and then tax that, you drive it down another 20% or 25%. So you're getting down again to about the 50% figure of the income that you have been used to as a family and it's then frozen for the time that you're on that.