If those guys are largely
right about the incentive factors that would then come into play (and especially if Americans were moderating their economic libertarianism with devotion to family, virtue, community, and God, as your work would urge them to), then by no means would that cause the social welfare policy disaster most liberals assume it would.
Not exact matches
I think it's all
about finding the
right incentive for your child.
And she's not
right to fail to note that the Common Core would have been — at least at this point in time — a sort of ambitious pilot program involving a smallish number of states that were serious
about the implementation challenges, until the feds blundered into the middle of it with «
incentives» that turned it into a sort of national piñata.
There are
about 25,000 experienced teachers to whom such an
incentive could be offered
right now.
You are
right to be wary
about manipulation — most investment advice comes with some sort of agenda behind it, usually an
incentive to sell certain types of products.
That's
right — company matching and tax
incentives will far outweigh the interest you will pay on just
about any type of consumer debt.
@Eric: you're sadly
right about Kickstarter not having an
incentive to implement ceilings.
But Andrew is
right about lag time and
incentives to make personal sacrifices — most people just won't make changes if there's no immediate and personal reason for them to do so.
One is, they have no
incentive to build plants that are more expensive without someone picking up the tab for the difference; another, there are trade barriers and tariffs that need to be adjusted (Bush folks say they are talking with Chinese
about this); another is the lack of intellectual property
rights law in China (and other developing countries).
Funding is essentially a commons so individual researchers have little
incentive to grow it; there are other more direct ways to career success (like being
right about a controversial problem).
Of course, individuals must play their parts, but with the
right incentives, even those who don't care
about the problem will tend to take the
right decisions...
So if your lawyers don't think content matters, if they don't have the
right incentives to produce it, or if they think it's something they can delegate to a staff person and forget
about, you need to correct those misperceptions, and fast.
In any industry, whether recruiting or investing, there will be bad players who only care
about maximizing personal gain, and good players who will do the
right thing even if it runs counter to their financial
incentives.
As an association site, Plug - In America excels in providing a lot of tools and resources for consumers to determine if an EV is
right for them, find the the
right model, learn
about national and state
incentives and more.
It works like this: High - occupancy buildings in a marketplace hold an «open house» so leasing brokers can tour the facility, ask questions
about amenities and
incentives, and discover what the building is doing
right.