Chatelot 16 said:
there is only one remedy for unemployment! real work! so build factories to make useful things, and hire people paid at the normal rate!
Original. We await your solutions in a world where, thanks to the exploitation of the working masses and disparities in money prices, the cost of labor varies between 150 and 1500 euros / month net. Just one example: Heiploeg sends Dutch shrimp to be peeled in Morocco (probably with a Czech driver)
Christophe said
Objection: these indemnities have already been prepaid by the social charges including unemployment insurance on the pay slip of the said indemnified ... and you are in Belgium and you know better than me the heaviness of the social charges in this country ...
In a sense yes, but on the other hand he is paid to do nothing or to work, as much as he works, right?
Reread my example with car insurance, it is exactly the same case: you have paid insurance but as soon as you need the insurance we change the conditions ... which private insurance would dare to do this without the trial at ass?
Let's not exaggerate anything: unemployment insurance is not insurance in the true sense: insurance companies make profits by running a risk, the community loses a lot of money.
In this regard: should I remember that retirees weigh much more heavily in social systems than the unemployed ... Ben what they have paid for? Well yes just like the unemployed ...
Theoretically, retirees are no longer able to work.
The pension system will have to evolve: when the reichstag howled against the establishment of a retirement system at 65, around 1880, Bismarck pointed out to them: come on, gentlemen, at that age, hardly anyone will touch it. Things have changed a lot. And many retirements are a substitute for unemployment.
In fact, we are trapped in a system. The International Trade Organization prohibits us from overtaxing imported products to finance unemployment, when they are their source: try to see manufacturing consumer electronics in Western Europe when DVD players land at 59 euros including tax in supermarkets. (However, it was Philips Hollande who invented this thing, which in 1980 cost more than a month's salary)
But, in fact, the biggest drag on our economies and nobody dares to talk about is debt. It is dishonest to want to bear the burden solely on citizens: companies too are responsible and beneficiaries.