-
Website
http://willwilkinson.net/flybottle -
Original page
http://www.willwilkinson.net/flybottle/2007/04/28/a-sensible-natalist-proposal/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Robert S. Porter
56 comments · 1 points
-
uknowbetter
362 comments · 19 points
-
huadpe
40 comments · 1 points
-
Vangel
43 comments · 1 points
-
Michael Drake
109 comments · 3 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Liberty in Context
2 weeks ago · 61 comments
-
Inequalities in Health Care
2 weeks ago · 31 comments
-
For More Responsible Climate Politics
2 weeks ago · 23 comments
-
http://www.willwilkinson.net/flybottle/2009/10/14/3821/
3 weeks ago · 27 comments
-
Technology Technology, Institutional Technology, and Global Warming
2 weeks ago · 12 comments
-
Liberty in Context
Why can't people pay for services rendered? I know, its a strange concept, but just maybe we could BUY and perhaps even SELL all the stuff that governments currently tax us for.
On the whole, I do like your proposal. It's far better than the current lunacy and can serve us well until I figure out how to create Absurditopia.
It is generally believed among biologists that resources flow down the generations in animals that invest in their offspring - because investing resources in offspring leads to greater reproductive success (so long as parenthood is assured to a high probability, ie. offspring really are genetic offspring - which is sometimes not the case eg. for cuckolded males)
Adults who invest resources in their parent are (biologically speaking) throwing away resources on non-reproducing relatives - while adults who invest in their children are increasing the chances of replication of a proportion of their own genes.
This genetic reality underpins various human instincts, so that if indeed parents were entitled to a tax share of their childrens' earngings then on average they would simply give this money back to the kids, and give the kids even more.
Also under this proposal society would suffer the inefficiency, economic dead weight and demotivating effect of much higher taxation.
So - it's an interesting thought experiment, but I think a bad idea.
That was one of my first thoughts. Whenever I leave for my 8 hour drive back home, my mom pushes a couple twenties on me. If it came to one of my kids giving me my 'cut', I'd just say, 'Oh, you keep it honey.' Is this an unconscious psychosocial ploy to increase the odds of being taken care of in extreme age? :)
1.Payments to parents would be tax deductible.
2.Social Security absolutely must be modified to take into account the income of seniors. (SS is a welfare program, not an insurance program)
3.Early payments would go into an investment fund for disbursal to the parents on retirement.
Etc.
Children would only begin paying back to their parents when their own education was complete and their school loans taken care of.
What happens to parents who have four kids, but all of them die or emigrate? Who makes sure kids don't let their elderly parents die of neglect to get out of paying? Does a woman whose father raped her repeatedly when she was a child have to pay him once she gets old enough to run away from home?
There are only two (non-mutually exclusive) things that can result from this kind of a policy: it's blindly applied, and large numbers of individuals are penalized for things that were beyond their control; and the government is forced to become even more intrusive to monitor all inter-family interaction.
Of course, the alternative to outright cruelty and intolerable intrusiveness is to abstract out the flows of payments to anonymise the cash stream, so that people are supported anonymously by aggregate cash flows contributed by everyone who had the good fortune to be born and remain healthy enough to be a contributing member of society.
Gee ... that sounds familiar somehow.
It is, incidentally, slightly bemusing to see the once-ubiquitous practice of "kids supporting parents in old age" declared a biological impossibility.