billw55, on 2014-August-07, 06:06, said:
Perhaps. But unable and unwilling are two very different situations. This is where you lose many people.
For sure! Nevertheless, we need to face up to the fact our capacity to produce goods and services relies less and less on people as workers.
Many jobs today are actually useless in themselves, but serve the economy solely by putting money in the pockets of folks who spend it. For years, the US has spent $8 billion apiece to build M1 tanks that were shipped directly to the desert in Nevada, joining 3,000+ other M1s rusting there. The ACA allows insurance companies to siphon off 15-20% of premiums paid to pay for completely unnecessary services. And there is a large bureaucracy dedicated to figuring out if claimants are truly unable to work or are unwilling to do so.
In my experience, very few people are truly lazy, but there are lots of reasons why folks might be unwilling to hold a job. It might be to spend some time raising kids or caring for a sick relative. It might be to gain the time to finish a novel, a research project, or an invention. It might be to gain education in a new area of interest. It might be to play bridge or chess or golf.
The thing is, folks who hold jobs unwillingly tend to be much less productive than those who enjoy what they are doing: Companies can be much more efficient without them. But companies need an expanding base of customers with money to spend. Guaranteeing a reasonable life for folks who, for some period in their lives cannot -- or prefer not -- to hold a job, would be a win-win.
The growth of wisdom may be gauged exactly by the diminution of ill temper. — Friedrich Nietzsche
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell