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Children are our future. Every child born into this world is a unique individual, precious for its own sake, and with its own new set of rights. Sadly, many children born today, even in advanced economies, are prevented from becoming the successful, well-rounded adults they deserve to be, simply because their parents are poor, or ill-educated, or irresponsible. It's time to start addressing this problem, and to face up to the massive transfer of resources it will entail.
Furthermore, opening up the debate on taxing the childless offers us the opportunity to correct a significant anomaly in the current democratic system. At present, sensible, long-sighted public policies, like reducing emissions under the Kyoto Accord, or massively increasing federal child benefits, are impossible to pass as legislation, due to the short-termist, myopic attitude of our political process. Throughout our society, most of our most pressing problems can be put down to a failure to take the long-term view. Is this failure to think of the future unconnected to the childlessness epidemic, identified by my colleague Elby in his column last week? I think not. |
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Parents are systematically more likely to think of the future of our planet and our society, because their children and the prospect of further generations of descendants give them a long-term stake in that future. Childless people, in the knowledge that they are a Darwinian blind alley, take a far more nihilistic, me-first attitude to the problems of the world. The childlessness epidemic of the last twenty years has meant that this selfishness has become unacceptably prevalent.
Nowhere is this phenomenon more obvious than in the plight of our inner cities. Both the social phenomena identified above come together to create a problem of monstrous proportions. Underprivileged youngsters are deprived of an education, of mind-developing toys and of the fashionable branded goods which are so necessary for well-balanced development these days. They grow up, not into productive members of society, but into damaged individuals - rootless, feckless, and most importantly childless young men, with no stake in our society, who therefore have no incentive to engage in anything other than the most destructive and mindlessly hedonistic of pursuits. This pathological culture is not confined to the inner cities, of course; it spreads to the wealthy suburbs, where the modern, career-oriented couple considers the sacred Darwinian function of reproduction to be a "lifestyle choice", putting children second to the demands of a modern, two-career, multiple-SUV household. Is it any wonder that people with such selfish, warped priorities end up voting for George W Bush? Given the twin problems of underprivileged children and socially harmful childlessness, an economist's answer to the problem would be simple - a fiscally neutral "tax vice to subsidise virtue" program. This is the first half of the policy program we recommend, and it makes economic sense. The only arguments against it are clearly fallacious, and typical of the self-serving anti-child lobby:
"Double votes for parents" is merely a crude rule of thumb aimed at enfranchising the future generations who are currently, disastrously, deprived of a voice in our political system. In the discussion of long-term measures like the Kyoto Accord, it is ludicrous that the very people who are likely to be most affected by the decision taken (the generation currently in swaddling clothes) are deprived of a vote by the very reason of their youth. Taking their votes and putting them in the hands of responsible, loving parents is a first step toward correcting this towering injustice. In the fullness of time, as we start taking decisions on matters such as genetic modification and deep space exploration, it may become necessary to increase the voting power of parents still further, to take account of expected future grandchildren and even later generations, but for now, it is pretty safe to assume that the more moderate reform would be sufficient to pass the sensible tax-the-childless policy.
This is clearly the way forward for America, and for other prosperous First World countries where the low birthrate has led to a culture of childlessness and its concomitant selfishness. With luck, we can reverse this destructive trend and look forward to a prosperous society, with sensible environmental policies. After all, we owe to our children, and to our children's children. And to each other's children.
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