Metsfanmax wrote:I don't exclusively support government provision of welfare. I donate my own money to charity as well, and I hope other people would not rely solely on government for this. But ultimately what shifts me to government provision is the nudging effect it has; most people do actually want to help out those less fortunate than them, but don't do it, perhaps because of forgetfulness or other factors. Having the government collect mandatory taxation for this purpose can often be a way to get people to do what they want to do anyway. To that end, I would prefer a solution that respected freedom of choice. One solution would be an opt-out scheme where taxes are automatically withheld at the higher rate necessary to collect money for the welfare provision, but where people could voluntarily choose not to pay the higher tax rate, say by some easily accessible internet form.
Coercing people into paying taxes for government welfare isn't what the nudge effect is about. Your use of "nudging" makes it sound nice, but it's not a nudge. About 30% of federal government spending to total GDP is welfare entitlements (social security, medicare, medicaid). Considering the size of that impact, it's hardly a nudge. It's a large wealth transfer.
Nudging is like offering tax credits for charitable contributions, e.g. writing a check to Red Cross or donating clothes. That accomplishes what you want with nudging. Taxation simply isn't nudging. It doesn't teach people to care about others or to encourage them to desire donating to others--especially since that money is being taken anyway. Labeling taxation and government spending on welfare as nudging is contrary to that book's main point. Just sayin'.
The underlined is simply not true. If you want people to donate more, then don't force them to pay more taxes and don't subsidize strangers with the tax revenue. If you examine the history of mutual aid societies, then you'll realize that people once had a greater capacity to care for others and to become more communally involved.
- People were already doing what you think they should be doing. The problem was that the federal government's provision of welfare crowded out mutual aid societies. As the government increased its scope of authority over the citizens' decision-making, then more local forms of self-government and communal activities were rendered less profitable because the gains were small. Discretion over the more important decisions was bottled into D.C.
Nowadays people go to the city council to complain about sewage and roads. It wasn't like that back in the day. More people were involved.
Here's the unintended consequence of your 'nudging' example: Why join a mutual aid society or donate to others when the government takes >15-39% (+5-10%) of your income and then irresponsibly and inefficiently uses it while giving it to people who aren't in your community? The local knowledge is missing; it's been removed from the picture by federal government. If Red Cross spends your donation irresponsibly, then you stop donating to them. With the federal government, the feedback is lacking. The autonomy is nil. The lessons which you seek to impart are not learned. Read Tocqueville's Democracy in America. Local government and communal involvement was the bedrock of democratic education. We've lost those roots with the expansion of the federal government. (just something to think about).
My main point here is that all these great things that you want for society were already being provided by society yet have been inadvertently removed by the federal government itself. Your stance (in support of the fed. government) is another story about good intentions leading to bad outcomes. It's another example of unintended consequences. We try to help but make things worse.
All of this needs to stop, and the change can occur when the federal government's scope of authority is narrowly limited into more appropriate categories (e.g. international diplomacy, regulating the economic union--i.e. prohibiting interstate tariffs, and national defense). That's classical liberalism in a nutshell, and if you want to respect freedom of choice, then you should become more like a classical liberal.
tl;dr
1. that ain't nudging, and it's counter-productive.
2. self-government and classical liberalism FTW
3. Since nudging is not occurring OR is not imparting the intended lessons, then what else justifies the ethical obligation for government provision?