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- Xref: sparky soc.culture.canada:9719 can.politics:11144
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.canada,can.politics
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!torn!nott!uotcsi2!news
- From: cbbrowne@csi.uottawa.ca (Christopher Browne)
- Subject: Re: Negative Income Tax (Was: Social programs)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan2.203519.7135@csi.uottawa.ca>
- Sender: news@csi.uottawa.ca
- Nntp-Posting-Host: prgf
- Organization: Dept. of Computer Science, University of Ottawa
- References: <1993Jan2.013912.12749@ee.ubc.ca> <1993Jan2.034012.25456@csi.uottawa.ca> <1993Jan2.194938.11001@athena.mit.edu>
- Date: Sat, 2 Jan 93 20:35:19 GMT
- Lines: 148
-
- In article <1993Jan2.194938.11001@athena.mit.edu> cmk@athena.mit.edu (Charles M Kozierok) writes:
- >In article <1993Jan2.034012.25456@csi.uottawa.ca> cbbrowne@csi.uottawa.ca (Christopher Browne) writes:
- >>In article <1993Jan2.013912.12749@ee.ubc.ca> jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca (John Paul Morrison) writes:
- >>>First, some negatives of negative income tax (does that make it positive ;-)
- >>>
- >>>1. Doesn't change the motivation (or lack of) for working vs.
- >>>starving
- >>
- >>I disagree on two counts:
- >>(a) the issue is not "working vs. starving," but rather "working vs.
- >>living on the dole."
- >
- >fine, then it doesn't change the motivation for working vs. living on
- >the dole.
-
- I disagree. Because of (b) below, the level of motivation WOULD
- change. Right now, there is an ABSOLUTE disincentive to work because
- people would in fact get LESS money if they worked. NIT would change
- this.
-
- >>(b) Right now, there is an absolute DIS-incentive to work if your
- >>income is below about $20K. NIT would at the very least smooth the
- >>"discontinuity" here.
- >again, what about those who are currently working for less than $15K, who
- >if they were smart would immediately quit their jobs under NIT?
-
- The case about which you speculate is one which is not made WORSE
- under NIT; it should actually get BETTER under NIT.
-
- Right now, it would be advantageous for those <$15K earners to quit
- and go on welfare. RIGHT NOW. They'd benefit economically from
- quitting their job. NIT would make it worthwhile for them to work.
-
- NIT would remove the absolute advantage to quitting the game. I could
- present some cost functions that would show how it would work; that'll
- probably eventually happen.
-
- >>>2. Could fail as splendidly as any other government program
- >>
- >>Always a risk.
- >
- >overwhelmingly so. so why do it? because we want to defy the odds yet
- >again and hope this time will be different? *why should it be different*?
-
- Unfortunately, there hasn't been any clear THIRD alternative
- presented. So far, the discussion has related to comparisons of TWO
- systems:
-
- a) NIT, and
- b) Status quo
-
- It's not likely that NIT could really foul things up THAT much worse
- than things are fouled up now. All that you've said is that NIT
- doesn't solve all of the problems. You haven't clearly shown how "The
- Status Quo" is better. Or how anything else is better.
-
- The fact is, ANY choice is risky. ANY choice might not work, for any
- number of reasons. That's not sufficient reason to reject ALL
- attempts at improvement.
-
- >>>Some positives:
- >>>1. Could simplify things, by sacking a lot of civil servants
- >>> (eliminate the social ministries, and let Revenue Canada collect
- >>> taxes and print cheques...seems simpler(?))
- >
- >>The improvement would be in the removal of "social ministries."
- >
- >not likely to happen. people just scream "i want" and up they pop.
-
- There seems to be a level of dissatisfaction in the populace that
- might actually let people stop and think.
-
- >>>2. could let private sector, free enterprise expand:
- >>> Ie, if Governments withdraws from running social services, and instead
- >>> merely hands out money, letting recipients spend it, and letting
- >>> the private sector compete to provide cheaper, better services.
- >>
- >>Good thought.
- >
- >as i pointed out in another post, the giving of money via the current
- >system or the new one has nothing to do with privatization of services,
- >which i am all for. so why wasn't it done with the current system?
-
- When spending goes specifically through government agencies, as is the
- case for welfare, the law of the land makes it somewhat difficult to
- privatize services.
-
- Services that lie pretty much at the commodity level are easy to
- contract out. The provision of "social services" is not an obvious
- "commodity."
-
- >>>And why do we have so many different levels of subsidies, payments,
- >>>handouts etc.? At least if we are going to stay with handouts, just
- >>>give individuals one big lump sum. Surely the administrative costs
- >>>would go down?
- >>
- >>Even if admin. costs don't go down, it at least becomes more clear
- >>that it IS a handout. People can't ignore it anymore then.
- >>
- >>I have a feeling that the TOTAL PAYOUT would go up
- >
- >then NIT is unacceptable. because we need to cut the total payout.
- >it is bankrupting us.
-
- If the efficiency goes up, then total COSTS may go down despite the
- PAYOUT going up.
-
- As it stands, for every dollar that actually goes out, three are spent
- on administration (social case workers, offices, and the likes). It's
- a whopping big cost.
-
- We could double the payout, and yet cut the COST to the taxpayer in
- half.
-
- I.e.:
- Case #1: 1992 - Under the current system
-
- Welfare Recipient received $10000.
- Administration cost $30000.
-
- Total Cost to Taxpayers: $40000
-
- Case #2: 199X - Under NIT
-
- Welfare Recipient received $20000.
- Administration cost $1000.
-
- Total Cost to Taxpayers: $21000
-
- Note that the payout doubled (let's ignore inflation/COLA here), but
- the cost to you, the taxpayer, went down by half.
-
- In theory, payouts could quadruple without increasing the cost to
- taxpayers. That ratio of 3:1 admin. costs leaves a LOT of room to
- increase payouts, or to increase the number of people that get such
- payouts.
-
- Without real numbers from some place like Stats Can, it's hard to
- determine the exact effects of an NIT scheme; but it wouldn't be hard
- to determine the impact of varying tax rates/minimum income levels. I
- suggest that you try playing with a few numbers. It might become more
- clear just how NIT would work.
-
- --
- Christopher Browne | PGP 2.0 key available
- cbbrowne@csi.uottawa.ca |======================================
- University of Ottawa | Genius may have its limitations, but
- Master of System Science Program | stupidity is not thus handicapped.
-