h a l f b a k e r yExperiencing technical difficulties since 1999
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Citizen accounting
A financial account ran by the government to show how much has been spent on you | |
Government's track approximately how much they spend on
citizens: education, health, benefits, services
administered. It's probably more of a spreadsheet division
rather than actively tracked and optimised.
I propose everyone is give a citizen account which is a
digital account and tracks
what the government has
invested in you so far from birth. You account begins as a
negative number. When you pay tax, the number goes
upwards and heads towards 0 and then a positive balance.
Government would like its citizens to earn an income for
the country. I propose all spending on citizens is treated
like an investment and citizens are provided with materials
regarding what is expected of the investment.
This data would let us do a comparison of each cohort in
society and see what spending produced what results - in
real people's lives. Education would get better.
[link]
|
|
This sounds remarkably sensible, although generalized information on per-capita expenditure is available. |
|
|
There isn't an account I can login to see what society has paid
for me directly. |
|
|
Policies taking effect in 1990 produced my life up until now. |
|
|
There's a very long lead time in predicting what will happen
when policies are changed. This idea could account for that. |
|
|
As a demographic only men over 40 return more than they cost. |
|
|
I basically see nothing wrong with this. |
|
|
Yes, and the weirdness is worrying us. |
|
|
How is the spending tracked? The government pays a bin lorry to come to my street once every few weeks and empty the bins. Suppose the lorry and staff can be accounted for as costing £1000 per trip. But my neighbour buys the vegetables from the supermarket with plastic wrapping, whereas I buy the unwrapped ones, and that means he puts more rubbish out, so shouldn't he be accounted as using a higher percentage of the bin-lorry budget than me? Also, I put my bin out on the kerbside but he puts his out on the pavement so the bin men take approximately 1/10 of a second longer to wheel his bin to the lorry than they take to wheel mine. How does your proposed system account for those cumulitive 1/10ths of a secondses? Also, I wash my rubbish before putting it in the bin, but the woman on the other side doesn't, I've seen her throw out yoghurt pot lids with bits of yoghurt still on them. That will only make the inside of the bin lorry dirtier and will cost money to clean off. I think that should be added to her account and not mine. |
|
|
Commercial organizations do it all the time. It's that, or go out of business. |
|
|
For the bin collections, I'd divide the cost of sending the truck
out by the number of homes collected from. That's your
household's cost. |
|
|
Imagine an app that showed a real time cost of you as a
citizen. |
|
|
The Ferengi have that ... |
|
|
How about an app that shows the real-time cost of your children, with extrapolations ? For situations like "Daddy, can I have a pony, pleeeeese ?" |
|
|
For further information on that, the cost is given by a tangent function with the argument (Theta -> pi/2) ... |
|
|
Children who have children might not return quite as
much as the stock market but they are remarkably
recession-proof |
|
| |