6.7.1.1  Government-Funded Public Services 

(The latest version of this page is at Pattern Descriptions.  An archived copy of this page is held at https://www.patternsofpower.org/edition02/6711.htm)

There are several services which a government might choose to fund:

·      The cost of protection services – the legal system and defence forces – depends upon policy in the Legal Dimension and upon foreign policy.  Defence spending is discussed in the next chapter (7.4.6.1).

·      The decision to provide public funding for health and education, which can be classified as socio-economic rights, reflects people’s political ideology and moral attitudes; there is a deep disagreement between individualists and collectivists on these issues (4.2.4.3).  Education also affects the productivity of the workforce and, therefore, the health of the economy (3.2.5).

·      Decisions to fund discretionary public services to improve the quality of people's lives, such as recreational facilities and support for the arts, depend upon a purely political assessment of what people want; views tend to be divided according to ideology, so some consultation and negotiation is appropriate before spending the money. 

When these are publicly funded, as is the case in many Western liberal democracies, they are available to everyone and reduce inequality.

The politicians assess what the people want, and are prepared to pay for through taxation, but the economic impact has to be taken into account (3.3.8.1).  If politicians try to reduce the cost of public services by only making them free for those below a certain income threshold, they benefit the wealthy at the expense of the low-paid (3.2.4.5); such decisions are likely to be affected by their calculations on who are their supporters. 

© PatternsofPower.org, 2014