POVERTY AND WELFARE
Dear friends,
The topic we are discussing this Saturday is: Poverty and Welfare.
This is a very trendy topic these days and given the economic and social 
mess we are in we might be justified in thinking that these issues go 
together. But as I tried to argue in the few paragraphs below, although 
welfare and poverty might inhabit the same abysmal grounds they are not 
necessarily blood relatives.
In the meantime Lola has also sent us her ideas on the topic she 
proposed and Ruel has kindly sent us the link to his essay.
Hello Lawrence,
I wrote something on Saturday's PhiloMadrid topic and here's the link:
http://ruelfpepa.wordpress.com/2014/07/16/on-poverty-and-welfare/
Thanks. See you.
Ruel
----Lola
POVERTY AND WELFARE
Ideas:
It seems that human society may have long periods of welfare going back 
to an increase of poverty again.
The cyclical issue provides with golden and obscure ages throughout times.
After world war ll, there has been a long period of prosperity and the 
nations seemed to race up in the pyramid of wealth more a more all 
through the western developed countries in the past seventy years more 
or less.
So, what happened? Now the tendency seems to go back to pre-war times in 
terms of unemployment and flight of capital anxiously looking for better 
profits, it looks like "end of world" attitude. It is not that big money 
doesn´t earn enough, but it is for capitalists certainly not enough if 
they cannot count of big sums of money coming into profits.
Capitalism should be punished for antisocial attitudes, but reality 
tells us that nobody is good enough to stop it, so they can turn lives 
of millions into misery without any legal problem or conscience´s. 
Nowadays the capital is sacred, the individual investments whatever they 
are based on are also sacred. Everywhere there is fear; it seems as if 
it should be the end of times.
I think one principle has been broken: progressive tax to people with 
higher incomes is no longer applied in some countries such as Spain. 
Rich people express great tension and they need to protect themselves 
with unconceivable laws to encourage this.
So, the transfer of funds to services provided, mainly healthcare and 
education is been jeopardized. Obviously the immigration tide has much 
to see in this subject, as society leaders have turned to contemplate 
people, not as  co-nationals but as a mass of greedy people trying to 
solve urgent problems their countries of origin do not provide them 
with, as  rulers are autocrats in countries they think they own.  So we 
have all become European immigrants in our own countries in spite of 
paying high taxes to ensure basic social services.
Welfare state has been damaged in such principles as equality of 
opportunity, equitable distribution of wealth and public responsibility 
and very important: to ensure minimal provisions for a good life.
Capitalism is endangering ethics, as they have got an army of thousand 
of million people in poor countries fighting for survival to be enslaved 
freely, with greedy governments ready to cooperate or look on the other 
side.
Lola Garona.
----Lawrence
Those political commentators who usually argue agaist welfare put 
forward two arguments. The first is that welfare is subject to abuse to 
the extent that countries with generous welfare systems attract economic 
migrants that are a burden on the system. The second argument is that 
welfare discourages people from entering the labour market and thus 
become contributors to the economy.
I am not convinced that poverty and welfare are necessary determining 
causes on each other. Hence, although in some respects they are 
connected, poverty and welfare have a scope independent of each other.
Without going into too much detail the modern version of the welfare 
system is conceptually based on the British system that was a political 
promise made to the British people for their sacrifice during the Second 
World War.
The system was based on a sort of pyramid scheme where one third of the 
nation would finance and support the rest of the country and the very 
same workers who might find themselves in financial trouble.
The irony is that today's failure of the welfare state system is caused 
by the very same factor that has caused the collapse of the neo liberal 
economic system. This factor is the assumption that there will always be 
a net growth in the economy and hence businesses and job creating 
institutions will always be net recipients of this wealth. The welfare 
state was never supposed to be financed by borrowed money and the neo 
liberal economy was supposed to create new money. However, the economy 
post 1980's was beginning to affect the welfare system and labour 
market. One of the big changes at the time was that credit was no longer 
a vehicle to enable transactions but a means to create more money in the 
system by simply buying everything today and pay later; except more 
money in the system does not equate to wealth. And as everyone knows 
today many people are going to be unemployed later. Money is what we 
need for transactions but wealth is what we need for investment: buying 
a car is a transaction, owning the patent rights of the car is wealth.
But creating money and especially wealth takes time and time is what 
people who wanted to get rich quickly did not have. Hence the situation 
today.
It is true that abuse of the welfare system can put strains on the 
system but abuse in and of itself is not an argument to reduce or get 
rid of the welfare state. After all no one suggests that we should get 
rid of the government just because some ministers abuse their office.
One of the most effective ways for people not to abuse the welfare state 
is to create a stable economy for companies to create wealth and thus 
offer stable jobs to people. But wealth creation is incompatible with 
quarterly profits higher than the previous quarter.
The other way to reduce welfare abuse is to have a mechanism that makes 
abuse difficult but legitimate users easy to obtain. Helping people in 
kind rather than cash can go a long way. People who abuse the welfare 
system are usually after the cash and not the services it provides.
As for the argument that welfare creates a dependency for people that 
make it difficult for them to want to enter the labour market is 
probably also based on a fallacy. The irony is that neo liberal economic 
thinking (and I am using the term rather loosely here - another non 
academic term would probably be free-for-all economics) is that although 
there is no ration agent to model economic behaviour, the rational thing 
to do for a person on welfare is to stay on welfare if the alternative 
is not sufficiently profitable.
Furthermore, even if we discount labour movement, not only must a job be 
more profitable than a welfare payment, but more importantly, there must 
be jobs to go to. What is clear is that there are not many jobs in most 
economies to cater for the various skills one finds in an economy; and 
still pay a fair wage. It is beyond a coincidence that the welfare 
system is mainly used by unskilled people and not many bank presidents 
or CEOs of multinationals rely on the welfare system for their income.
What was once a system that served as a safety net for people in 
transition between jobs or hardship periods has today become a long term 
country club where governments underwrite the subscription fees so that 
the private business sector can pursue short term profits instead of 
long term wealth and growth.
The only relationship between poverty and the welfare system is that 
poor people are more likely to be excluded from the profitable labour 
market. But poverty is not just a matter of not having money but also a 
mind set, or group culture. Many people don't have money but still 
retain their dignity and still manage to be in reasonably paid jobs.
What is happening today is that there seems to be a class shift 
downwards. Those people who once occupied the lower and middle levels of 
the middle class have had their real income reduced substantially to the 
extent that their living standards have been reduced but their asset 
costs have increased (i.e. mortgages, cost of education, transport, 
health costs). The poor have always remained poor and those who made it 
out of this class did so on their own and through hard work. The middle 
classes were never meant to be members of the welfare system but net 
contributors.
But if you remember, the middle class was the creation of more complex 
machinery of state that was required by monarchs to keep their enemies 
away from their wealth. The king (sometimes queen) had enough people to 
help them plunder the wealth of the land and that of others.  He only 
need a middle class when more people wanted part of the action and 
started offering their more sophisticated ways to plunder more 
efficiently. Today, these maverick kings are not called kings, but CEOs, 
heads of families, presidents, offshore investors, and "bosses". And 
like their predecessors they do not need to employ many people to 
channel the bulk of global wealth their way.
Thus poverty is inequitable distribution of resources probably based on 
the natural instincts of greed and domination of others. The welfare 
system was a political pact in recognition that those who operate the 
machines of state and production (working classes) are worthy of 
recognition and help when they need it. However, this pact in now in 
tethers because the state as a model of power and wealth distribution 
has been abrogated in favour of wealth concentration by a few economy 
outriders and their sidekicks.
Best Lawrence
tel: 606081813
philomadrid@gmail.com <mailto:philomadrid@gmail.com>
Blog: http://philomadrid.blogspot.com.es/
<http://philomadrid.blogspot.com.es/>
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28010 Madrid
914457935
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-----------Ignacio------------
Open Tertulia in English every Thursday from 19:30 to 21h at
O'Donnell's
Irish Pub, c/ Barceló 1 (metro Tribunal)
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----------------------------
from Lawrence, SATURDAY PhiloMadrid meeting: Poverty and Welfare
 
 
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