h a l f b a k e r yWhere life imitates science.
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,
|
|
|
This collection agency would, rather than simply hounding people for money, strive to create partnerships with employment agencies. Anyone owing a debt would be granted some tangible additional chance to get a job through the agency's point system. So the collection agency wouldn't just send nastygrams,
but also information about how the person in debt would have a better-than-otherwise chance to get a job. It wouldn't be the best jobs, but a lot of debtors really would be happy to make payments if they could get any job at all. Win-win-win! Taking directly from their paycheck would cross a lot of legal and ethical boundaries, but an additional benefit would be knowing exactly how much the debtor is making and offering them a voluntary percentage to be paid back before they see the money.
The Workhouse
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workhouse The return of the Workhouse. [xenzag, Aug 12 2021]
Parole Fees and Imprisonment.
https://robinainsti...robation-and-parole [MechE, Aug 12 2021]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
This is a brilliant idea. [+] |
|
|
A somewhat moral collection agency? Wow. |
|
|
//This is a brilliant idea// |
|
|
But it may encourage jobless who have no debts to establish
debts & default on them for the extra job points. |
|
|
Oh, hang on, that
would mean extra business for the debt collectors |
|
|
No
you're right, this is a brilliant idea |
|
|
It is not the same as, but does remind me of, the ancient practice
of debt slavery. |
|
|
Not so ancient, recent history in the US (& probably UK come
to that), persisted into the 1800's at least if not the early
1900's. |
|
|
True, but as long as it's all voluntary, including paying
back the debt. |
|
|
Anybody who lends money should be ready to write it
off or not be allowed to do it. Collateral is okay, but
that's it. |
|
|
Aha! there it is .. Google tells me debt slavery (indentured
servitude) ended in 1917 in the US, that's pretty recent
history in my book [pert]. |
|
|
Could they pay back their debts by becoming debt
collectors? It becomes so much more interesting
that way, like some kind of zombie virus. |
|
|
[Ray] - What kind of jobs would a collection agency have
available? I think it's a pretty natural fit. [zombie virus] *
[pyramid scheme] |
|
|
Also possible is offering to reduce or extend the terms on the debt or eliminate fees provided the debtor accepts the arrangement or evidence is received that he is looking for work other places. |
|
|
Yes, but also ancient. Some ancient things are extremely persistent. |
|
|
Debt slavery pretty much still exists. See link. |
|
|
Bezos could pay off everyone's dept on the entire planet and still have enough money to build a solid gold replica of the Taj Mahal on Mars. |
|
|
In Victorian times, this used to be called the "Workhouse"
and was a kind of debtors prison. Lots of 18th and 19th
Century literature takes place in and around these places,
often charting the fall from grace of a wealthy family
through no fault of their own. |
|
|
[edit] Aha yes, just as [xenzag]'s link describes. |
|
|
//In Victorian times, this used to be called the "Workhouse" and was a kind of debtors prison// |
|
|
May I suggest you actually read the idea? |
|
|
I think its too honest for some folks, but nice + |
|
|
[Voice] I did, I promise - perhaps I'm more cynical than you, but there's a great
deal of stretch in the phrase "strive to create partnerships with employment
agencies" which could be interpreted any number of ways given the levels of
trust and confidence people have with unequal power-relationships. |
|
|
If the idea were implemented by super-kind and helpful people with lots of time
and spare resources and who were idealistic enough to really make a proper go of
it, and a wider business environment willing to invest and train a pool of willing
and eager individuals, it would undoubtedly be great. But if, and I don't think it's
too far a stretch of the imagination to suppose, if it was an underfunded system
dragging along with a mixture of severely disadvantaged people and those who'd
grown callous and broken through years of un-fulfilment, staffed by frustrated
and underpaid folks who might benefit here and there from the occasional
misuse of their asymmetric power relationships - then it might be a less fruitful
exercise. |
|
|
The Workhouse got a bad reputation, but I think, just like this idea, if you can
implement it with positivity and a bit of heart, it could be a winner. Sadly, those
particular human quantities are often quick to evaporate in all but the most
specific and delicate circumstances. |
|
|
I think the fundamental category-error with this idea is that by and large, humans don't want paid employment, what they really want is income streams. Now this instantly becomes a political question rather than a jobs-market question. Yes there are tasks that really need doing; yes there are people who do not have enough resources to keep themselves healthy and alive; yes there are people who are in debt. But there are also people who set up their systems so that they have income without having to work, and there is also a lot of useful work that can and does get done without any payment being offered in return. And a lot of jobs are artificial make-work, in that they set up a series of useless tasks that no-one actually wants done, purely to give someone who believes in the artificial income=job=work identity the excuse to deliver a person an income stream. Money after all is merely a way of allocating resources. |
|
|
The main problem, at least in some countries, is that agencies are likely to give you ANY job in order to keep you in their files. Government employement agencies are bad enough about offering people jobs which pay less than benefits, but imagine if it's a private agency which makes money with accumulated interest. An employee of a collection agency once told me how much he loved his job, because he could go into work in a good mood or a bad mood and no one cared... |
|
|
That employee was a
sociopath
then or simply joking [4], I used to work in
a
collection agency (a Bailiffs firm) & though it's true
given the nature of the job that for the most
part you don't have 'customers' as such that can complain &
be paid any attention by the boss if they do basic
human nature is such that (within
reason) they actually want to be liked by others & end up
feeling guilty if they mistreat others unnecessarily, which
isn't an enjoyable emotion, non-sociopaths don't find
the ability to mistreat others when in a bad mood
something they enjoy once the mood has passed .. take it
as received wisdom from one who knows, one with
experience of it back b4 he
was a sociopath, when he was still human ;p |
|
|
//agencies are likely to give you ANY job in order to keep you in their files. Government employement agencies are bad enough about offering people jobs which pay less than benefits, but imagine if it's a private agency which makes money with accumulated interest. // |
|
|
That's what minimum wage is for. And why it's too low. |
|
|
Honest Job the collection agent has a little shop on the High Street,
next to Honest John, the bookmaker. However, God has chosen to
smite Honest Job with a plague of boils, despite his insistence that
he is not a sociopath. |
|
|
/Honest Job// //Honest John/// |
|
|
Once knew a bakers called Hot & Crunchy next to a pet shop
called Wet & Furry, made you wonder what was in the pies ;) |
|
|
Not going to help that over worked shift worker with
the needed transport's mechancal fault. Budgetting is
probably the first stop. Here in NZ, housing is a blown
out cost, all other basic needs are getting squeezed. |
|
|
Bottom line, profit isn't about cost morality, it is about
the limit of what price can be achieved. Standing on
everyone else, the sky's the limit. |
|
|
In the burbs of Detroit, there's a strip mall that had a
Weight Watchers clinic right next to a Joann's
Alterations and a Cinnabon. |
|
|
//In Victorian times, this used to be called the "Workhouse"//
Just a quick historical note. Workhouses were still in existence until just after WWII. My grandad was a workhouse boy & was sold* to the Royal Navy. When the war broke out he had the dubious pleasure of serving on the Baltic convoys during the war. The Workhouse seemed quite luxurious by comparison.
* I am a bit hazy on the exact details of this, so stand to be corrected on the exact nature of the transaction that took place.
//Taking directly from their paycheck would cross a lot of legal and ethical boundaries//
See also, 'Slavery'. |
|
|
Even if they were abused that way they would be free to quit without being punished. And even such an extreme wouldn't include taking ALL their money. So really no more slavery than any other wage slave is under. |
|
|
[mfd] magic. Or fantasy at least. And a bun to
RayfordSteele for inversion recursion. |
|
|
Hmm, references? Also, the debt collection agencies I've
dealt with have been really friendly. |
|
| |