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To: SeekAndFind

“...Chile’s sound macroeconomic policies under the Bachelet administration have created a savings fund, currently around $15 billion, which will allow the new government to face this tragedy with resolve and immediacy...”

Bachelet had NOTHING TO DO with setting up the fund! It has been in place for MANY, MANY YEARS. Over the years the Socialists have even tried to raid the fund for pet projects.


2 posted on 03/04/2010 7:48:58 AM PST by WellyP
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To: WellyP
Bachelet had NOTHING TO DO with setting up the fund! It has been in place for MANY, MANY YEARS. Over the years the Socialists have even tried to raid the fund for pet projects.

Still, Chile's retirement system is something the USA should seriously consider. I remember Bush Jr. trying to push for something similar but by then, his political capital had been spent on Iraq and his popularity was plummeting.

Less government intervention has not been tried and found wanting... it has not been tried for a long time. Everytime it has been tried, the results are better, less costly and more prosperous for all.

Take rent control for instance, On January 1, 1997, Boston, Cambridge, and Brookline became the first major American cities to abandon rent controls since 1950. The process was not altogether voluntary. The initiative came from a statewide campaign organized by Boston and Cambridge property owners, who put up a state ballot initiative banning rent control. The initiative that passed in 1994 required immediate removal of rent controls.

The aftermath has been encouraging to those who believe that rent control can be abolished without widespread disruption. Tenant activists had predicted huge rent increases, mass evictions, and a surge in the homeless population if the regulations were abandoned. None of this has occurred. Formerly regulated rents have risen, but construction of new apartments has also begun for the first time in 25 years. Since the overwhelming majority of rental units were deregulated by 1995, and the rest by January 1, 1997, the worst is probably over.

To be sure, there have been individual cases of hardship that tend to attract a great deal of media attention. Almost without exception, these incidents involve tenants who have suffered a loss of income but still have been able to afford their apartments because of rent control. In one case, featured prominently in many newspapers, an elderly diabetic who had been unable to work for 10 years was losing his apartment in the Fenway district of Boston because the landlord was tripling the rent. [1] But tenants frequently are forced to move when they suffer loss of income. Rent control only delays the process and its abolition cannot be held responsible for every instance of tenant displacement. Boston property owners have alleviated the situation considerably by setting up a bank of 200 apartments around the city that are immediately available for such emergencies.

If less government intervention works in Chile and Boston, it will work everywhere else. Unfortunately we don't have the collective political will to do it.
4 posted on 03/04/2010 7:57:18 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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