It was very clear that I was referring to change agents. As I said, we profile the poorest households. In each one of them we try to identify someone that we can assist in order for that person to change the conditions of that family.
The broader question of youth unemployment is a tinderbox. We all know and we all agree that it is a tinderbox, and government is trying to respond to that challenge, not by employing one approach or one instrument only, but by employing a multiplicity of responses. As you correctly pointed out, it is a huge, huge challenge, and we are aware of it and alive to it.
That is why the efforts of government range from offering bursaries, to the absorption of young people into further education and training colleges. The Minister of Higher Education and Training is also looking at other ways of empowering these young people. We are aware that there are about 2,8 million in the cohort 18 years old to 24 years old who are not in any institution of learning and who are not in any job.
So the response is much, much broader. All I am explaining is that the response to the specific question put to me was not really about youth unemployment in its entirety.
The youth employment tax incentive will work. We are quite confident, as government, that it will work and we will employ it. Working people inside and outside of Cosatu will come to understand that this is an important instrument to address this burning problem of youth unemployment. Thank you. [Applause.]