R
ribozyme
Guest
I think the hikikomori approach is much better than the US approach especially when all the jobs for unskilled labor have been shipped overseas.The US response to the lowness of wages for unskilled labor has been transfer payments from the gov’t such as the EITC and refundable tax credits rather than reducing the amount of laborers and therefore increasing the wages each laborer can earn.
There are pluses and minuses to this. One minus is that companies that hire labor at low wages essentially get part of the employee’s actual cost paid by the feds. One plus is that by having as many people earning as possible, even if the feds wind up paying some of the freight, the US as a whole benefits from the stuff produced by the workers.
Sweden takes a different approach.
I don’t know that there is a better way. I don’t like the fact that people who are mentally ill tend to be homeless, it seems like there ought to be a better way to deal with it than let them be out on the streets in mortal danger from one another as well as other assorted menaces.
I do not know about Sweden and Denmark, but I do think their approach might be better than the hikikomori approach.
As for unemployment, the seemingly low numbers in Denmark reflect in fact the same kind of manipulation of statistics that the Swedish government have been using. While official unemployment in Denmark was only 133,500 or 4.8% in March 2006, there were in the fourth quarter (latest available number in Denmark’s statistical data bank )some 117,600 people or 4.2% in so-called “arbejdsmarkedspolitiske foranstaltninger(=“labor market political activities”, what in Sweden is refered to as “AMS-åtgärder”)”. This means that Denmark have even more hidden unemployment in that respect than even Sweden, where “only” 3.2% (144,000) were put away in “labor market political activities” .
Maybe “arbejdsmarkedspolitiske foranstaltninger” and “AMS-åtgärder” would a better alternative to the US approach. (Another translation for “arbejdsmarkedspolitiske foranstaltninger” is “labour market policy measures.”)The headline unemployment rate in Sweden is only 5-5.5%, but this number is extremely misleading as it only includes a small number of the people who the government pays not to work. Many unemployed are sent to so-called “labor market political activities” who have no meaningful purpose then to reduce the headline unemployment number. Including them, unemployment is 8%.