delphiandomine 86 | 17823
15 Jul 2013 / #121
Actually I don't think that's the best solution. Reason being, I've met some real slimey characters with lots of money in this country. I see no reason to reward people in that sense when so many of the people positioned to receive that reward have already cased the system (so to speak). I think that is a solution but not the best one.
I suppose it's the same in every country. Following on :
I think offering high rate taxpayer rebates for post-secondary graduates would be preferable. The higher the degree, the more of a rebate they deserve should they decide to have children, whenever that may be. I admit that's just an off-the-top-of-my-head idea and would need tweaking but my bottom line is that the people with the most money don't need tax breaks and the people with the least money maybe aren't for me to judge.
Yes, it is a very nice idea - it would reward those with education that chose a vocational career (such as nurses and teachers) too. It would reward education (no bad thing) and if combined with rigorous checking of institutions awarding degrees, would be a reliable way of rewarding people. Probably it wouldn't be perfect, but it makes far more sense than the current situation where people are encouraged to breed by governmental handouts.
However, if long-term stability is a goal then certainly, leaders should be encouraging the most able bodied and minded people to become parents.
This is the problem with most of the "pro-family" policies - they aren't helping the most able ones, but rather than ones that aren't able. For instance - you get 95% off tram tickets for having 4+ children in Poznan. But the vast majority of well educated, stable families don't have such amounts of children - so you just end up subsidising 'pathological' families as a result.
Fair enough. If that's an accurate description then I stand corrected.
Don't worry, I understand your cynicism - the horror that is a lot of teacher 'training' leaves a lot to be desired.
I hear what you're saying, utilities don't care what time it is. When something stops working, it stops working. That said, the first guy must have a sweet set-up if he can work those hours. I admire something in that as well.
I don't think he does, it's just the general attitude in Poland that the customer is there to serve the business and not the other way round.
For what it's worth, I've found that good people in Poland will be very loyal and professional, more much so than in the UK.