C would be nice, LB. Any idea how to convince people to make it happen?
A more specific example, though, hrm. Decentralize as much as possible in as many places as possible. Make 90+% of every administrative/paperwork/service job done from home. Cut out a vast majority of travel time and massively reduce necessary on-site infrastructure. I'd say the most that it would take to implement would be some infrastructure shifts (more consistent internet, ferex) and maybe some software improvements, and with proper methodological shifts (go digital, damn your eyes!) you might even see efficiency improvement for the work itself. Hell, tax administration would be an excellent field to implement something like that, since it wouldn't really require much of an on-site presence if it was done properly. From what I understand, it's already something gaining a degree of momentum on a general level. There's known work separation issues for that sort of thing, but it tends to be pretty painless s'far as I'm aware.
I gave plenty of links. But an "experimental run" is pointless. A quarter of the country runs on septic already. But cities prefer sewer systems because it's a source of revenue.
Well, two links (that I noticed), neither of which had immediately accessible information of the sort a proper implementation run (especially for larger/denser areas) would provide. The wiki link even mentioned there may be issues related to urban area implementation, which is why I'd say give it a go (or two) before implementing it on a larger scale. May just not have been looking in the right place, though, which would be my bad.
And others objected to other examples. And if you gave specific examples that you thought were a good idea, somebody else would find something to complain about. We have some people in this thread genuinely claiming that working is good, proper and healthy for people, and so reducing work at all is a bad thing.
Haha, which is why I disagreed with them, yeah?
I don't see any way to make everyone happy, but if we look at what's best for society, I don't think pandering to every little special interest group is the way to do it. Yes, maybe maybe some particular income brackets would end up paying marginally more taxes with a flat tax than they do now, but too bad. Six billion hours of pointless, wasted, stupid work is not worth preventing that.
... unless that marginally more taxes (on a larger number of people... remember, you've noted yourself the median income, and that's going to be among the ones being hit) ends up forcing them into greater effort to make up the difference, or notably impacts their quality of life. It's entirely possible we can reduce those hours
without that. I think we can (and I think we
are -- electronic submission penetration is at something like 60-70%, iirc, which has already saved ridiculous amounts of time just re: transportation related issues), and we should try that first before resorting to something more extreme, with strong downsides. Even a flat tax wouldn't completely eliminate those hours, after all.
But yeah, pandering to every little special interest group (and, of course, every
big special interest group) is part of the reason the tax code's as much as a mess as it is. We could stand to cut back on that, but there's ways to do that while maintaining a progressive tax rate, if we could just get the political capital/will to
do it.
And @ TC, well... I think it's shifted as much to jobs as it has because they're currently one of the major driving issues
of capitalism, as it is, and especially how the system is going to react (is reacting, really) if they start disappearing.
well, why SHOULD I pay someone more to do half the work?
You wouldn't be. They'd be producing the same output, just in less time. Instead, the situation as is is that we're paying fewer people to do the same output, or paying people less to do more output (i.e., not scaling as output increases)... or fewer people to produce more, of course. It's fairly rare you're actually seeing pay in line with output, these days, s'far as I'm aware. Production efficiency improves, wages largely do not (accounting for inflation et al, of course).