• @ironhydroxide
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    14 months ago

    Aren’t you the one who claimed I wasn’t making a good faith argument?

    It seems your only argument is “$2000/yr bad!!!” Care to elaborate on that?

    • sadreality
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      14 months ago

      Korea provides more cash than that… Payments from 150 to 750 USD per month depending on age/situation.

      US social policy is clown even vis a vis degeneracy like Korea. Don’t get me start on health care.

      So I am not sure what your original point about the US giving child tax credit was for…

      • @ironhydroxide
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        14 months ago

        So it’s the amount you care about, not the method of the incentive.

        The original comment is about the method of the incentive, and pointing out that even though the us incentive doesn’t have the same value as other countries, the method is at least not directly giving that incentive to corporations, hoping they’ll “do the right thing”(hint, they won’t)

        • sadreality
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          24 months ago

          Providing the incentive as tax credit inherently ties the benefit to employment, just not as much as the clown proposal in OP.

          My understanding that base Korea benefit is done via direct transfer, which is the proper method for such things.

          • @ironhydroxide
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            14 months ago

            Amount shouldn’t matter in regards to the system, but You have a point there, a person does not incur tax debt unless they’re claiming earnings. And you have to claim enough earnings to actually file for a refund, that can partially or fully “cancel” the meager incentive.

            I am/was ignorant on the current state of incentives in S.Korea, if it actually is direct payment, the current system is indeed better than the US system. But without a doubt what their leader proposed is worse.