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gideon magnus's avatar

An idea I have been pondering is to let social workers place bids on "cases" (i.e., people who need help getting back on their feet). The social worker who bids highest wins. The social worker gets paid the amount they bid, but only if they achieve some measurable success, e.g. if the person they are helping manages to find a job. Harder cases will obviously lead to higher prices, as social workers foresee a lower likelihood of success.

Charles Pick's avatar

Something that is frequently missed in the asylum debate is that most modern US prisons have what are effectively asylum wings complete with medication line-ups and about as much psychiatric attention as in a formal hospital setting. So we did not really abolish them but shuffled around the people and the institutional responsibilities.

The lower security wings of modern prisons are almost indistinguishable from mental hospitals. Arguably the conditions are a little better in prison because inmates can work. Costs are kept somewhat low by aggressive corrections department budgeting. In the medical setting costs will tend to balloon because the government agencies in that context do not operate from a strict budget.

Perhaps the big problem we have with both corrections and hospitals is that state governments have a strong incentive to inflate the welfare rolls and to dump as many people as possible on federal welfare programs like SSDI. A successful post incarceration outcome for a state government looks like someone on federal subsidized welfare forever.

The attempts to get people back into work post-incarceration tend to be furtive and half hearted because low end workers are reliant on welfare. Low end workers who do not work under the table are socially unattractive because marrying them will often result in loss of benefits. You do not even want to divorce a low end worker to get child support from them because in a lot of states that just results in the same level of benefits for the single mother, but with some of those benefits provided by an unstable creditor (dad) that just get taxed as a clawback of benefits. We made this pariah caste that no one wants to think much about except for the petty local bureaucrats who use their existence as an excuse to whinny for money.

So the issue with the corrective institutions is that they will repeatedly prosecute a malefactor until they do something really bad that makes it so they can't suspend sentences indefinitely anymore, then they go to prison, and "success" in a best case scenario is they're on prescription drugs and welfare forever.

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