My bit for the meaningless drivel forum.
I was having a discussion
online about 'essential' services. A person was very upset that government money (at some time in the past) had been spent on singing lessons when his council was having trouble funding health visitors.
S/he saw health visitors as essential and every pound/euro/dollar/bit spent on something else took money away from these kinds of essential services.
I said that this was a false binary, money was clearly available to spend on grouse moors
(basically landscape size glorifed chicken pens) and they wrote
But it's not a false binary choice, is it ?
Every pound that the government spends on free singing lessons is a pound that can't be spent on Health Visitors. Similarly, every pound that is spent on Health Visitors is a pound that can't be spent on Teachers' salaries. Etc etc.
But I still maintain that it is a false binary.
There isn't one special pound/ buck/euro/ bit that is spent on either singing or health.
There are many pounds, many choices. Most of our governments choices (worldwide) seem to be concerned with hyper-capitalism, or the use of money to make money, via the shortest route possible.
This is a bit like measuring the rain that falls on the hills and concluding that we only have that amount of
water to work with, and the best thing to do is to collect it into a
concrete channel and use it to make hydro-electricity.
But if we're smart about it we can slow and sink that water into the landscape, to re-hydrate it, creating springs and streams, growing
trees and pasture, winding it through the landscape, allowing it to spill from
pond to
pond, creating habitat for wildlife and irrigation points for gardens and animals before finally collecting it to make hydro power, a portion of which we could use to pump a proportion of that water back up to a high landscape storage and make it work for us again.
My point is that money invested in say, singing lessons, isn't necessarily wasted. It doesn't disappear. It could bring many benefits to individuals and
local economies, it goes around, gets VAT/GST/BTW/ service tax paid on it, gets income tax paid on it, possibly several times. Then again it may not. It all depends on how the system is designed.
It is pretty fair to say though, that much of the money 'invested' in grouse moors is probably just going straight to the top, and getting sucked into the hyper-capitalism game, getting shifted offshore away from taxes, and therefore is, effectively 'disappearing'.
And as for what is 'essential' or not, to paraphrase antoine
de saint-exupéry:
'The essential is (often) invisible to the spreadsheet'