A measure of American social welfare

So far as I can see, there is no socialism in America. There is, however a great deal of social welfare (defined according to Merriam-Webster as “...organized public or private social services for the assistance of disadvantaged groups” — the disadvantaged groups being the rest of Americans).In this country there are 313 million people. But according to the Department of Labor there are only 101 million working-age Americans. From that number you need to subtract the following who are paid to look after the 212 million who do not work as well as, presumably, the rest of us. That is all these folks are paid to do, protect, safeguard, oversee and rule:Police officers — 794,000 (2010 figure)Firefighters — 344,000 career (and 756,000 volunteer)U.S. Military personnel — 1,468,364 (2011 figure; made up of 565,463 Army, 333,370 Air Force, 325,123 Navy and 201,157 Marine)Federal government employees (nonmilitary) — 2,935,000 (lowest since 1960, by the way)Federal government contractees — 1,027,250State government employees — 3,779,258 (2011, twice the 1960 figure)State goverment contractees — 1,322,740So, from the 101 million working Americans you need to deduct anyone who is not within the capitalist system. Basically, they are involved in social welfare; they are social workers (by definition).• • •So far, that leaves 89,329,388 actual productive workers. That is about 88 percent of the work force. When you deduct the 7.5 percent who are unemployed, you get a working, productive force of just 81,754,388, or just 81 percent of the available workforce. That is getting close to the old USSR numbers of 22 percent of the population as working for the government and 78 percent was working in industry or farming.What is worse, these social workers do not contribute one dime to the Gross National Product. However, without them — or at least some of them — we would not have a safe working country to work in. It is a hard balancing act for any country but we, as a nation, have a work/social worker ratio twice as unproductive as many competitive developed nations.Perhaps it is time to rethink the insulting use of the word socialism when so many of us are social workers. And do we need all these social workers and their huge budgets?Peter Riva, a former resident of Amenia Union, now lives in New Mexico.

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