Apparently the US has a small welfare state because a majority of Americans believe that work is a determinant of success.
From the NCPA;
Capitalism, when combined with a relatively small government, is a well-established ticket to improved standards of living. However, many countries continue to oppose capitalism. The resistance of many countries to adopt capitalist economic systems has puzzled economists for decades, says Kevin A. Hassett, a senior fellow and the director of economic policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute.
In a recent study, economists Alberto Alesina, Edward Glaeser and Bruce Sacerdote found that pre-existing social attitudes toward luck may be the crucial determinant of the political path of a society. The authors uncovered a striking difference between American and European attitudes towards the poor:
* If you ask Americans whether they believe the poor are lazy, 60 percent agree.
* However, if you ask Europeans, only 26 percent say yes.
Historically, large welfare states have emerged in countries where citizens generally believe that luck determines income. According to the authors:
* If bad behavior (or laziness) is viewed as a source of poverty, then the welfare state is small.
* America has avoided the fate of Europe because its citizens disproportionately believe that luck is not that important a determinant of one's circumstances, but hard work is.
* If Americans are predisposed to believe that high incomes are generally merited, then they will be resistant to change.
* However, when capitalists succeed because of bribery and corruption, citizens become less convinced that the income distribution reflects merit, and are more willing to redistribute.
It takes more than luck to maintain a free society. If America is to avoid acquiring a welfare state the size of Europe's, the rule of law must be vigorously defended and the corrupt must be adequately punished, says Hassett.
But a recent NZ study found an even larger number of Kiwis blamed being poor on being lazy. A whopping 73 percent.
Yet New Zealand has become a large welfare state. The best reason I can come up with is that for decades now NZ has been 'ruled' by minority opinion. The special pleaders and anti-capitalists are running the show. The lobbyists are powerful and our parliament is not representative of how many New Zealanders feel about work and welfare. And political correctness has made people afraid to challenge the status quo.
Poverty and crime
1 hour ago
3 comments:
"Yet New Zealand has become a large welfare state. The best reason I can come up with is that for decades now NZ has been 'ruled' by minority opinion."
I'd also suggest NZ has very weak property rights. For instance, the contractor who finds a better way of doing things will quickly find his prices lowered so that the employing company can take advantage of his innovations and hard work. Or Labour's shameless filching of National's Student Loan Scheme to expand it to more useless qualifications in Macrame or whatever. It stole the working man's dollar to do that.
JC
The PC brigade has almost succeeded in stifling debate on isssues as poverty, child abuse and welfare reform.
Facts and statistics must be swallowed as peddled by the Left, and never challenged, otherwise you're labelled a racist, a bigot, a lazy academic (Dr. Clydesdale is a recent example), and so on.
Keep up the excellent work, Lindsay. Sooner or later, your voice will be heard.
Keep it up- the word is slowly getting out there.
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