 It's part of a larger question, when economic growth takes place, what happens to poverty and inequality, and what are the mechanisms for transmitting economic growth if it takes place to improving people's conditions? So there has to be some sort of channel open for people to be able to benefit from growth. The starting point for our research is the employment channel and the starting point for studying the employment channel is Latin America because of the availability of excellent data. Because development economics, first and foremost, is about improving people's economic well-being. And since most people derive most, if not all, of their income from the work they do, it's essential to see what determines employment opportunities and the rewards to employment. Nearly everybody's working, but how much they earn for the work they do. The inequality has been falling. That hasn't been our focal point, though. The focal point has been that poverty has been falling, absolute poverty, and that people's returns from the work they do. More people are employed. They're employed in better job categories. They earn more for the work they do. And this is true not only in total, but disaggregated men and women, youth and adults, different sectors of the economy, so on and so forth, for the 16 countries in Latin America for which we have data, and we've been able to do this research.