

Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
If you look back a page, I posted some graphs of nations' household savings rates. These are averages, so certainly there are those who save more. And arguing that it is harder to save with a higher income is simply not gonna fly...ArmorPierce wrote:Yeah saving more than 30% is very possible, but you have to give up the American consumerism culture to some extent. But why are we arguing throw-away numbers about amount you can save anyway?
Stas, saying "kings are better off dead" does not answer the question, which is about human psychology.K. A. Pital wrote:Kings and aristocrats are irresponsible "divine" rulers, "owners" of the land and overlords of the people. They belong to the guillotine.
We are talking about those who receive legitimate power from the people, at least in theory. Their inability to save is no excuse for unbound luxury overconsumption. Society should not literally pay for the irresposibility of its rulers.
If the kind of people who seek to become MPs are greedy enough to consider taking bribes and kickbacks on a decent salary, then showering them with cash is hardly going to discourage them. The hunger for money isn't like the hunger for food, which even among the biggest eaters has its limits in satiation or in the extreme, stomach capacity. What exactly stops them from accepting the larger pay packet and the generously stuffed brown envelopes?Pinjar wrote:UK MPs are likely to directly compare themselves to MPs from other Anglosaxon countries and so looking at the posted data they probably do think themselves grossly underpaid. If someone feels that they are underpaid, even if they actually are not, then I would expect their performance to suffer and corruption to increase. Sometimes the reality of a situation really does not matter.
NoXion wrote:If the kind of people who seek to become MPs are greedy enough to consider taking bribes and kickbacks on a decent salary, then showering them with cash is hardly going to discourage them. The hunger for money isn't like the hunger for food, which even among the biggest eaters has its limits in satiation or in the extreme, stomach capacity. What exactly stops them from accepting the larger pay packet and the generously stuffed brown envelopes?Pinjar wrote:UK MPs are likely to directly compare themselves to MPs from other Anglosaxon countries and so looking at the posted data they probably do think themselves grossly underpaid. If someone feels that they are underpaid, even if they actually are not, then I would expect their performance to suffer and corruption to increase. Sometimes the reality of a situation really does not matter.
Isn't Britain the country where even pedophiles get away if they are high profile enough? I can't imagine an MP taking a bribe would be all that risky.madd0ct0r wrote:only if you believe there is a significant risk of being caught.
The problem is that there are two separate arguments which can be conflated here:NoXion wrote:If the kind of people who seek to become MPs are greedy enough to consider taking bribes and kickbacks on a decent salary, then showering them with cash is hardly going to discourage them. The hunger for money isn't like the hunger for food, which even among the biggest eaters has its limits in satiation or in the extreme, stomach capacity. What exactly stops them from accepting the larger pay packet and the generously stuffed brown envelopes?Pinjar wrote:UK MPs are likely to directly compare themselves to MPs from other Anglosaxon countries and so looking at the posted data they probably do think themselves grossly underpaid. If someone feels that they are underpaid, even if they actually are not, then I would expect their performance to suffer and corruption to increase. Sometimes the reality of a situation really does not matter.
Simon has given a much more better answer than I would have but it seemed self-evident to me that people would judge themselves by their peers. To stylize the position: By their own standard they are living in penury, Australians are paid twice as much for the same work and all their friends are multi-millionaires.NoXion wrote:If the kind of people who seek to become MPs are greedy enough to consider taking bribes and kickbacks on a decent salary, then showering them with cash is hardly going to discourage them. The hunger for money isn't like the hunger for food, which even among the biggest eaters has its limits in satiation or in the extreme, stomach capacity. What exactly stops them from accepting the larger pay packet and the generously stuffed brown envelopes?Pinjar wrote:UK MPs are likely to directly compare themselves to MPs from other Anglosaxon countries and so looking at the posted data they probably do think themselves grossly underpaid. If someone feels that they are underpaid, even if they actually are not, then I would expect their performance to suffer and corruption to increase. Sometimes the reality of a situation really does not matter.