Silver Persian
Banned
As part of a vague attempt to study for my exams tomorrow, I want to start up a discussion on the welfare state. The Howard government has been trying to reduce dependency on the welfare system by encouraging people to support themselves through the labour market. (This is using the 'welfare state' in its broadest sense, to include any government intervention into markets in an attempt to promote higher living standards)
Arguments for dismantling the welfare state:
-takes money away from the private sector, which is market driven and will therefore direct resources towards areas where there is consumer demand - allocating resources efficiently.
-These resources will be then be used efficiently by businesses, because they face the strictures of competition which will force them to be productive or face insolvency
-The welfare system encourages dependency - it mostly supports people who cannot be bothered getting a job
-The market ensures that individuals are rewarded according to their contribution to the economy - if individuals have spent the time and money to get an education, they deserve to be rewarded for this. Individuals who have not pursued an education, or made choices that have left them without a source of income, only have themselves to blame.
-Taxing the responsible is an infringement on their liberty - they have earned the right to their income, and should not have it forcibly taken away from them.
-The welfare saps incentive from the economy. If I can live at a reasonable living standard without working, why would I bother getting a job? Also, entrepreneurs are less likely to undertake risks if they are not going to be rewarded highly for it, and the high taxation needed for the welfare state takes away this incentive.
-By taking money away from the wealthy, you will discourage savings. Poor people will save less, because they need the money to buy food and stuff. The wealthy can afford to have a jar of money that they are not using at the moment - which can be put into financial institutions and turned into investments.
-The faceless bureaucracy of the welfare system reduces community values - individuals come to rely not on the individuals around them, but the state. This leads to the breakdown of communities and encourages selfish individualism and a lack of compassion.
Arguments against dismantling the welfare state:
-Social democrats tend to highlight notions of citizenship - claiming that individuals born within a country have an inalienable right to a reasonable standard of living, as well as healthcare, education etc. It sort if links to Rousseau's ideas of the social contract, where citizens and governments share a set of rights and responsibilties to fulfil.
-A more equal distribution of income will promote high levels of utility. If I have a dollar, and I get an extra dollar, that is like, heaps awsome. If a millionaire gets an extra dollar, he will not notice. So the living standards of people will be, overall, higher if income is distributed equally.
-The idea of the 'dole bludger' has been overemphasised. There are a lot more unemployed people then there are job vacancies, meaning that we can't claim that anybody who really wants a job will be able to get one. (To which an economist will respond that we need to get rid of the minimum wage. However if the government isn't willing to do this, isn't unfair to take income away from the unemployed when it is the governments communist fault that they cannot find work).
-Markets are historically unstable, and there needs to be a reasonably large government sector to rectify recessions when they occur and to ensure minimum living standards are provided to the broader population. By doing so, it will reactivate aggregate demand to pump more life into the economy
-Leaving individuals without any social welfare creates problems that need to be paid for - like worse health, higher rates of crime, worse education results, tendency towards depression/suicide. Reducing welfare payments costs money elsewhere.
-Markets sometimes fail to provide infrastructure needed for economic success. Things like railways lines, telephone systems and roads, require so much investment that private firms are generally unwilling to invest in creating them.
-Public goods: goods that are non exclusive wont be provided privately. For instance, if person x pays a private military force to protect the nation, persons y and z will benefit from this expenditure as much as person x will. In this situation, people will be unwilling to pay for this essential service, and the public sector needs to step in.
Whew...that's all I've got at the moment. Feel free to tear apart arguments made above, or add ones I've missed.
Arguments for dismantling the welfare state:
-takes money away from the private sector, which is market driven and will therefore direct resources towards areas where there is consumer demand - allocating resources efficiently.
-These resources will be then be used efficiently by businesses, because they face the strictures of competition which will force them to be productive or face insolvency
-The welfare system encourages dependency - it mostly supports people who cannot be bothered getting a job
-The market ensures that individuals are rewarded according to their contribution to the economy - if individuals have spent the time and money to get an education, they deserve to be rewarded for this. Individuals who have not pursued an education, or made choices that have left them without a source of income, only have themselves to blame.
-Taxing the responsible is an infringement on their liberty - they have earned the right to their income, and should not have it forcibly taken away from them.
-The welfare saps incentive from the economy. If I can live at a reasonable living standard without working, why would I bother getting a job? Also, entrepreneurs are less likely to undertake risks if they are not going to be rewarded highly for it, and the high taxation needed for the welfare state takes away this incentive.
-By taking money away from the wealthy, you will discourage savings. Poor people will save less, because they need the money to buy food and stuff. The wealthy can afford to have a jar of money that they are not using at the moment - which can be put into financial institutions and turned into investments.
-The faceless bureaucracy of the welfare system reduces community values - individuals come to rely not on the individuals around them, but the state. This leads to the breakdown of communities and encourages selfish individualism and a lack of compassion.
Arguments against dismantling the welfare state:
-Social democrats tend to highlight notions of citizenship - claiming that individuals born within a country have an inalienable right to a reasonable standard of living, as well as healthcare, education etc. It sort if links to Rousseau's ideas of the social contract, where citizens and governments share a set of rights and responsibilties to fulfil.
-A more equal distribution of income will promote high levels of utility. If I have a dollar, and I get an extra dollar, that is like, heaps awsome. If a millionaire gets an extra dollar, he will not notice. So the living standards of people will be, overall, higher if income is distributed equally.
-The idea of the 'dole bludger' has been overemphasised. There are a lot more unemployed people then there are job vacancies, meaning that we can't claim that anybody who really wants a job will be able to get one. (To which an economist will respond that we need to get rid of the minimum wage. However if the government isn't willing to do this, isn't unfair to take income away from the unemployed when it is the governments communist fault that they cannot find work).
-Markets are historically unstable, and there needs to be a reasonably large government sector to rectify recessions when they occur and to ensure minimum living standards are provided to the broader population. By doing so, it will reactivate aggregate demand to pump more life into the economy
-Leaving individuals without any social welfare creates problems that need to be paid for - like worse health, higher rates of crime, worse education results, tendency towards depression/suicide. Reducing welfare payments costs money elsewhere.
-Markets sometimes fail to provide infrastructure needed for economic success. Things like railways lines, telephone systems and roads, require so much investment that private firms are generally unwilling to invest in creating them.
-Public goods: goods that are non exclusive wont be provided privately. For instance, if person x pays a private military force to protect the nation, persons y and z will benefit from this expenditure as much as person x will. In this situation, people will be unwilling to pay for this essential service, and the public sector needs to step in.
Whew...that's all I've got at the moment. Feel free to tear apart arguments made above, or add ones I've missed.