Re: Kinder, Gentler Class Struggle
by
JohnZirinsky
10/19/2007, 2:30 PM #
kgswiger:
How does making things more fair reduce the size of the overall pie?
How is the homeless family living on the street now better off than the homeless family living on the street in 1920?
In two ways.
1) A reduction in expected benefits disincentivises people from risky ventures. Why leave Stanford to found Google if you're not going to get rich and are giving up a lifetime of security as a tenured professor?
2) Inefficiency. Enforced fairness requires either greater controls on free enterprise or explicit redistribution of wealth. The history of government regulation shows the waste inherent in the former, and the latter leads to (1).
First of all, homelessness is very different than poverty. At least 50% of homless persons have a problem with substance abuse, and 25% have a serious mental illness (<link>). In Ameica today, simple poverty is not why most people live on the streets.
That being said, here's just a couple of the support programs the indigent today have that they didn't in 1920:
Healthcare, in the form of guaranteed ER care and Medicaid, not to mention the tremendous advances in immunization and public health
Social Security for the unemployed, retirees and the disabled
Subsidized housing
Food Stamps
The Earned Income Tax Credit, which functions like a cash handout, averaging $4,536 for a family with two kids last year
Of course, as I was getting at before, the biggest advantage is simply that they are LESS POOR IN REAL TERMS!