 Yuri Dadosch, welcome to WPC-TV. You are a senior fellow with the OCP Planning Policy Planning Unit and also at the Breugel think tank in Brussels and you live, I know, in Washington, D.C. You've just been on a panel on, based on education. I mean, one talks always of the talent gap, the skills gap, I mean, is there an easy solution? There is no easy solution, in part because, you know, what you do today in education will have an effect 20 years from now. But it's clear to me that the kids, that's my view, need a little more direction than they're getting at the moment, in terms of, you know, some of the more technical things that we need and the engineering, etc., which are not particularly popular for a lot of young people. You mean finance has become too popular? Well, actually, not necessarily finance, but general studies of various types. And, you know, I don't want to knock any area of education. I think education is at the heart of the human spirit. But in terms of preparing kids for the job market, I don't think we're really doing a particularly good job. We're leaving them, essentially, to themselves, to a very large degree. Now, when you say we, do you mean Americans, Europeans, Middle Easterners, or is it ever happening? Actually, the irony is that I don't know any country that's happy with their education system. Now, I don't live in Finland, but maybe they're the exception. But it's actually one of the regularities that I see when I travel around the world that people are deeply unhappy about their education system, the quality of the education or very often the gaps and the diversity within the education system with a few privileged people and the bulk. But I would say that, you know, some countries and some regions are suffering more than others. And in particular, I would point to the Middle East, North Africa, very simply because they have a huge unemployment problem among young people, including among university graduates. And they have a bulge of young people coming through the system. And their education system really is one of the worst performing in the world. So there's a big challenge there, both indirectly in the kids, but also in the governance of education. So it's going to be a very big challenge. Yuri Doudouche, thank you so much for coming on WPC TV. Thank you. Thank you for having me. I'm Yuri Doudouche. Thank you. Thank you. And I'm going to leave you with my family. I'm going to leave this video to you. I'm going to leave this video to you. So I'm going to leave this video to you. Okay, thank you. Thank you. I'll see you guys in the next video. Bye-bye. Bye.