QuickTidal, on 28 March 2018 - 06:54 PM, said:
*insert quizzical face*
Because it allows more people in the work force, paying more taxes, it alleviates the stress on the public infrastructure that currently supports those that CAN'T afford child care, it allows young families to have more than 1 or 2 kids which ups the overall birthrates (which have been falling in the "echo" of boom, bust, echo) which in turn brings even more bodies into the system and paying taxes, it buffs up the job industry of child care in general which helps people find work and de-stresses the welfare/care aspect of the provincial system. I'm sure there's more. It's not some magic bullet that automatically resolves deficits and balances budgets on the fly, but it sets into place a system that can very much help....in the long run. The gamble is that the Liberals hope that RIGHT now...it won't bother voters to be in a deficit...if the long term gains are sufficient and ca help that deficit in the future.
It is going to allow more people into the work force who will pay more in provincial taxes than their childcare would have cost? Not remotely.
The degree to which it will incentivize other children is wildly undetermined (being that the more expensive years are still not covered and this is a 2.5 year window of expense). Even if it did, you are talking a 20 year lag where they are drains upon the system before they would ever have a productive impact on the deficit or economy.
As for buffing up a job industry of childcare, why doesn't the province just hire us all? Again, less than zero sum.
Quote
You know how this ^^ reads to me? It reads "I don't have kids, but damned if people having them should get any kind of help for doing so and I sure as shit don't want to pay for other peoples kids"...which is...I dunno man. You live in this country. These things help people who choose to undertake the task of having families and putting bodies into our industry, economy, and everything else. You BENEFIT from others having kids and fuelling who we are as a country and a global economy.
It is funny it reads to you that way, because what I in fact says is "I am
already giving 'any kind of help', but that doesn't mean that myself or people like me are going to be wild about the prospect of giving
more"
Also, spare me the martyrdom of parents who are producing widgets for the economy for the sake of us all. "Undertake the task of having families"? Complete bullshit.
I have never seen a family planning discussion that included the phrase "we have to do our part for the GDP of 2045". People have children because they want children. Not future workers.
The absolute hilarious part about your reaction is that I don't even in principle oppose funding childcare, even though it will cost me more, and I will derive proportionally WAY less benefit than many others within my own economic class.
I oppose dangling it in desperation as a carrot months before an election, and the shaky information on financing, timeline, and how it would be implemented that results. And I am telling you it is a tougher sell than you think. Don't believe me? Ask Paul Martin. He's the last liberal to dangle this at the end of a long, semi-corrupt run of liberal governments to float this as an election issue to try and get him over.
Child-care is a huge (and difficult to both fund and implement) risk that should involve due consideration, expert review and costing, and carefully planned timelines. Ontarians should know what they are signing on for. Especially those who will not be 5 figure beneficiaries. If you want to promise to fix potholes to buy a few votes, lovely. Temporary tax break? Fine. But promising a major, permanent entitlement in this way is absurd and disgusting.