On Thursday December 15, the economist Constantin Gurdgiev tweeted
that 121 women were jailed last year for not paying a fine on conviction
for failing to have a television licence.
A woman I know, who
struggles to exist within a twilight world between work and welfare, was
so panicked by that tweet that she went directly to the post office and
paid €160 for a licence. She is left with €27 for Christmas. That is a
fact.
Business! cried the Ghost, wringing its hands again.
Mankind was my business; charity, mercy, forbearance, and benevolence,
were all my business.
Set in Victorian times, the spirit of
Jacob Marley in the classic Charles Dickens' novella of love, tax and
redemption, A Christmas Carol, is sure to warm all of our hearts again
this Christmas.
Yes, it is good to give, to dwell in that moment for a while, to feel content within ourselves,The glass and GLASS MIXED STONE
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really, which is all it is; in itself, it is so much better than not to
give at all. But if personal happiness is the sole motivation, then
neither can that alone be good enough anymore.
In The Virtue of
Selfishness, the Objectivist philosopher, Ayn Rand, writes of morality,
approvingly, to the effect that many do not consider to give to charity a
virtue at all, let alone a moral duty.
"Man's mind is his basic
tool of survival. Life is given to him, survival is not. His body is
given to him, its sustenance is not. His mind is given to him, its
content is not. To remain alive he must act and before he can act he
must know the nature and purpose of his action," she once wrote.
But the foundational argument of Objectivism cannot be sound.
In
these desperate times, I find myself to be more in tune with the
sociologist Beatrice Webb, who once said that charity is, or should be,
the exercise of "a thoughtful benevolence".
Not benevolence
alone but a thoughtful benevolence – a reasoned, prudent,
discriminating, even sceptical benevolence – a benevolence that is
acutely aware of the often unintended consequences of goodwill, that
knows it to be more important to do good than to feel good; that is
morally and spiritually satisfying for the giver, and morally as well as
materially beneficial to the receiver.
Gertrude Himmelfarb, a
professor of history, says it is this kind of charity that promotes
welfare in the proper sense of that word – the well-being of citizens.
Shortly
before the ascension of Queen Victoria, a royal commission, which
deplored "the mischievous ambiguity of the word 'poor'", proposed a
major reform of the Poor Law. The name was a misnomer, the commission
said; it was a pauper law, not a poor law. Most of the poor – which is
to say, virtually all of the working classes – were indeed poor, but
they were not paupers.
Two measurements are used by the Central Statistics Office to measure poverty in Ireland.
In
2009, the most up to date figures available, there were 233,192 people,
or 5.5 per cent, in 'consistent poverty' and 579,819 people, or 14.1
per cent, 'at risk of poverty'.
At risk means an income of €230 a
week for an adult; consistent means unable to afford new clothes, meat
or fish, or being unable to heat your home.
After the Celtic
Tiger crash more than 18 per cent of children – our Tiny Tims, if you
like – were at risk of, and almost 9 per cent were actually in,
consistent poverty.
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Two
regressive budgets later, which have included a cut to child benefit,
several thousands more, including many, many children, will be tipped
into a form of poverty, whether 'consistent' or 'at risk'.
Lately
– belatedly, perhaps – when I refer others to this analysis the
response is usually one of passing concern followed by an air of general
indifference.
Some cite anecdotal evidence, from wherever that
may come, that the poor, or those at risk of poverty, can afford to
drink and smoke, after all, that they have Sky Sports in their homes,
apparently, that they have a car on the road.
The more aware
also say that the Department of Social Protection spends a massive sum,
more than €20bn a year, which accounts for around 40 per cent of total
Exchequer spend.
This second point is made in a tone of
resentment; the argument is reasonably valid – up to a point – but it
remains oblivious to what we might call the majesty of The Principle of
Humanity.
Here is the argument though: to apply the free market
philosophy of a libertarian economist, Milton Friedman, if the €20bn
budget were divided among, say, 400,000 on the Live Register they would
each receive €50,000 a year.
The public sector class, in
numbers, pay and administration, are clearly a huge part of the problem,
such costs that the IMF again argued last week were out of touch with
the remainder of society.
It is also clear that what is referred
to as the "welfare" state is in urgent need of reform, such reform that
I do not even pretend to understand, let alone where to begin, other
than to say that only those in real need should be intended to receive.
This
much is also true: at the height of the boom there were still more than
100,000 people on some form of social welfare, for any number of
reasons, many of which have to do with the principle of humanity.
To
use another buzzword, by all means "crack down" on fraud, but also
concentrate on the causes of fraud, some of which are deep-rooted,
others merely skin deep.
I know of another woman, her
circumstances too complicated to go into right now, other than to say
she has never worked a day in her life. She is 34.
The bottom
line is this: if she were to take a job, she would lose the roof over
her head and the heads of her children. She is in what is called the
"welfare trap". That is also a fact.
When Social Protection
Minister Joan Burton recently referred to school leavers who claim
welfare as a "lifestyle choice" she was almost set upon; but again, she
had a point.
"The best way to lower the social welfare bill is
to create jobs," Sinn Fein said in response. In The Principle of
Charity, let us be charitable this Christmas: that is to state the
bleedin' obvious.
Joan Burton has faced into a huge task. In her
reform agenda, she would do well to introduce – another buzzword –
"transparency" to take account of the deeper philosophical issues at
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with detailed informations. then Joan Burton must show people how other
people have to live. In this sceptical age, that is the sort of society
we have come to; that is what bitter experience has forced us to
become. We need to see the evidence to know that it is true.
Nor
should they stop there: open up the family courts too, and the
immigration courts and let the people see what passes for a fair society
here.
And just what is going on down in the Commercial Court?
The forgiveness of debt is essential for the country, yes, but also for
its citizens many of whom are without hope.
In that context, we
must also come back for our builders and businessmen. They are dying by
suicide every day and nobody knows how to talk about it; and our
children are taking their own lives too. Online. For everybody to see.
When
John Bruton, in a church, recently spoke about the absence of
forgiveness, he was almost set upon but he, also, had a point: the
bankers may eventually be forgiven only when they forgive us our
trespasses as well; so not yet, not even in this spirit of Christmas.
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