by Simple Minded » Sun Jul 31, 2011 4:44 pm
As a professional problem solver, I have noted that those who are ineffective problems solvers ususally fail at the first step. They fail to accurately define the problems and the costs/timeframe of the solution. They often delude themselves with their own ideas, rather than focus on the relatively immutable aspects of reality.
In order to avoid repeating the mistakes of the past, lets avoid the meaningless fluffy vocabulary of "helping the poor," "making life fair," "social justice," etc. Those are open ended, unattainable goals.
Lets also not forget that Government has no money, and can only provide benefits to Paul, by robbing Peter. This year we raise taxes (on which Peters?) by 10% (burn 7% in adminstration costs -THANKS for being realistic noddy), and redistribute 3% to the poor. Next year, since "poor" is relative, the poor Pauls still exist (and whose numbers may actually increase due to the perverse incentives of the newly implemented program), and we push for a 15% increase in revenue. This pattern of perpetually increasing taxes/fines/fees will continue without limit, since we foolishly implemented a program with no defined limits. As the last few decades have shown, when the current generation starts to protest, we simply simply shift the cost to those too young to vote or voice an opinion.
Regarding the stimulus effect, government extracts $10 from the economy, spends 7% on administration, to re-distribute $3 in hopes of stimulating the economy? Hmmm.... Is this not the same idea of tax deductions to subsidize home buying? Does it not do little more than raise the price of housing?
For those who believe this is stumulative, here is the deal, for each one of you who send me money, I promise I will spend 30% of each and every dollar you send me immediately to stimulate whatever aspect of the economy you choose!!!!!! Whooo hooo... happy days are here again......
I would like to update the list of things we must consider before we can solve this problem:
Human Nature, regarding the willfull refusal to think about:
hidden costs - (robbing Peter to pay Paul)
perverse incentives - (people who get paid to do less, will probably do even more of less in the future)
unintended consequences - (Peter has a lot less money to spend on his mortgage, kid's college fund, food, clothes, government funding crowds out charitable donation and private borrowing, etc)
the flaw of linear thinking - (if we give the poor 3% of GDP today, they will be satisfied with 3% year after year)
mistaking cause and effect
Simpler approach, each quarter we redistribute X% of GDP to the poor. If the number of poor equals Y, each quarter, each poor person will receive $[GDP(X)(0.3)]/Y.
Simple math, as GDP rises or falls, so will the money the poor receive, as the numbers of the poor change, so will their paychecks. Asuming everyone reading this post is a current producer, you all realize that your take home pay will be reduced by X% the day this program is implemented? Don't you? Assuming no pay increases, where will you cut your current expenditures to get the X% required to fund this project?
All right lets start. Each one of us can post the number X they are willing to start paying, where they will get the additional funding, and most importantly, all you True Believers out there can start sending me money.
Let it be written, let it be done!!!