PeterZ wrote:Someone will always grow their portion of the pie faster than anyone else. The question is will that person generate that wealth honestly by providing services that people want and will pay for or will they use power and influence (government or otherwise) to exhort it from others?
Punishing achievement will ensure the latter.
Annachie wrote:Well no Tensh. What seems to happen is the people with the biggest share of the pie try for the biggest share of the new pie. (I accidently wrote piggest. It might fit better actually
)
Sent from my SM-G920I using Tapatalk
Growing the pie at what ever rate is not the issue so much as the public dollars it may have taken to "provide the oven"...
Do you have a factory that makes pies? Did you build the infrastructure to get the flour and eggs and other raw materials in? Did you build the water treatment plant for supply and waste water? Did you develop the regulations that make sure you get butter instead of lard? What about the finished product... do you make sure that your competition is not 'cheating' with improper weights and measures or cutting costs by dumping his waste water into that little stream that supported native trout before he go his bakery there?
Or how about the schools where your line employees learn to read and write so they can follow your instructions? The pie baker does not have to do all that just to get their pies out the door.
Some of your pie has to go to support the infrastructure... finding the fair and reasonable way to be sure that no one cheats on this is also part of the infrastructure.
I have said earlier, government is not "a for profit business" it is intended to support the 'climate' in which "for profit business" can operate.
Do a search on Nestle Waters California operation that is pulling from a reservoir in San Bernardino national forest. Even though there is drought, in 2015 the drew 36 million gallons of water and they are still paying 1978 rate of $524 / year while the sold 4 billion $ worth annually. They said it would violate their rights to have to renegotiate and the top government rep said it was too complicated. Now he is a high paid consultant for Nestle.
Stripping the top coat off a road surface every 7 years and conducting proper resurfacing is expensive but it is still cheaper than letting the road fall apart and need to be rebuilt.
Building a school, hiring qualified teachers and keeping the roof from leaking and the light turned on have to be paid for.
I live in a town where the budget is decided by town meeting and a referendum. So far we have had to go through this process three times. The first two times important infrastructure maintenance was cut from the budget. This to me, is the height of foolishness.
It seems that too many people expect far more than they are willing to pay for.
Fix the economy??? Fix the government by starting with term limits then, eliminate the pension and perks of the bureaucrats and former legislatures who take these "THANK YOU GIFT" jobs when their term is over.