Karnal wrote on Mar 9
th, 2015 at 11:09pm:
aquascoot wrote on Mar 9
th, 2015 at 8:58pm:
Karnal wrote on Mar 9
th, 2015 at 7:57pm:
True, Aquascoot, but you put your horses down if they break a leg, don’t you?
They all get sent off to the dogfood factory in the end, no?
Maybe we should change the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
no karmal not at all.
thanks to the fact that the cream horses earn so much money (becasue we look after them the best) there is plenty of surplus cash to get a vet out if one of the slow horses breaks a leg.
of course if i gave them all equal care and the cream horses werent encouraged to "be all that they can be" then when the slow ones broke a leg i'd have to get out the shottie .
so lucky for those slow ones that i have a good business model. They understand the correctness of my ideas that they will often say, when offered a cube of sugar or a carrot, "please give it to the cream of the horses boss, our future happiness depends on them"
Do you have any kifs? Would you apply the same principle to.them?
surprisingly, as much as possible I do.
I use the same principle that one uses to train a horse
"make the wrong thing hard and the right thing easy'
a recent example, distracted daughter 1 had her second car accident (probably fiddling with her make up or the CD player). daughter 2 always does the "right" thing.
what to do with the $1200 excess.
one must help ones children, they are ones "legacy"
but instead of giving daughter 1 the $1200 (ie making the wrong thing easy) I gave daughter 1 $600 and told her it was only fair to also give daughter 2 $600). this served as a lesson that good behaviour must be rewarded (what we reward we get more of).
My girls understand these principles.
now how should we apply this "scooter-nomics"
well, yes, everyone is entitled to medicare and free education .
but what about things like encouraging the 65 to keep working (which we are told is a good thing).
make this easy...why would you reduce the pension by nearly $1 for every dollar earnt.
same with the dole, why would you punish someone on the dole by taking away their health care card when they find work.
what about national savings ( a very big problem as we have none), when savings earn interest of 2.5 % why would you tax that and then give a "tax break " to negatively geared investors.
if you build a small business (surely a good thing) why would you tax the capital growth and punish the hard work.
if you are stupid and buy dud shares , why would you reward the stupidity by allowing this to be both negatively geared and written off as a capital loss against other income.
our Canberra based economic system is chock full of cash flows which
1 punish the right thing and
2 reward the wrong thing.
I could go on forever.
why would you give junkies free needles but make diabetic buy theirs at the chemist (when you want to encourage good sugar control).
why would you provide free fillings at public dental hospitals (when the right thing is to clean your teeth) but turn away wisdom teeth cases (which are not the customers fault and result in teeth crowding and fillings down the track).
in so many ways, the knee jerk reaction is usually to throw money at the problem and not think about how to alter the behaviour that lead to the problem.
I can give you one right now.
tax all sugary and fatty foods with an extra GST and use the money to subsidise free fruit and veges for school kids to be available at every public school.
makes economic and moral sense.