--%>

Creating unhealthy dependency by welfare payments

According to several critics who favor reducing welfare payments, and existing welfare programs as: (1) cannot cure poverty without substantial funding hikes. (2) are justified only when they increase total production. (3) harm poor people by creating unhealthy dependency. (4) inefficiently postpone a required social revolution. (5) are relatively efficient but absolutely inequitable.

Hey friends please give your opinion for the problem of Economics that is given above.

   Related Questions in Microeconomics

  • Q : Dollar revenues and accounting costs

    Can someone please help me in finding out the most accurate answer from the following question? The Accounting profit is the difference among: (1) Dollar revenues and accounting costs. (2) Net revenue and economic cost. (3) Accounting cost and economic cost. (4) Psych

  • Q : Measurement of price cross-elasticity

    Price cross-elasticity of demand measures the virtual responsiveness of the quantity sold of a specified good to a change in the: (w) price of which good. (x) individual's income. (y) sales of another good. (z) price of another good.

    Q : Ratio of Wealth and Poverty In 1980

    In 1980 year, the chief executive officers that stand for CEOs of main corporations had income which averaged roughly 40 times as much as the workers they working. In 2005, such ratio is less than: (1) twenty to one. (2) forty to one. (3) one hundred

  • Q : Marginal revenue product of labor The

    The monopsonist will hire labor till the labor's marginal resource cost equivalents the: (1) Marginal revenue product of the labor. (2) Marginal physical product. (3) Value of average product of the labor. (4) Price of the labor. C

  • Q : Weekly economic profit of profit

    The profit maximizing firm currently here in illustrated graph can generate a weekly economic profit of approximately: (1) $29,000. (2) $31,500. (3) $34,000. (4) $36,500. (5) $39,000.

    Q : Workers volunteered to work in purely

    Even though workers volunteered to work as "for free", such purely competitive firm would never hire more than: (i) L2 workers. (ii) L3 workers. (iii) L4 workers. (iv) L5 workers. (v) L6 workers.<

  • Q : Goods in positive price cross

    When two goods contain positive price cross elasticities of demand, then the two goods are: (1) inferior goods. (2) superior substitutes. (3) complementary goods: (4) gross substitute. (5) normal goods. I need a go

  • Q : Demand perfectly price elastic

    Demand is perfectly price elastic when the price for Pixie's cheesy fried grits is a mostly unmeasurably small bit below the: (1) zero. (2) P1. (3) P2. (4) P3. (5) P4.

    Q : Example of acquisitions of merger The

    The Overpriced Petroleum Extraction Company (or OPEC) has just declared its acquisition of some small firms with facilities which will permit OPEC to process oil via the whole refining procedure, from oil field recovery via transporting and then trading the refined pe

  • Q : Screening and Credentialism The critics

    The critics of ‘credentialism’ suppose that firms making employment decisions tend to mainly rely too heavily on: (i) Personal contacts. (ii) Personality testing. (iii) Past experience. (iv) Job interviews. (v) Formal education and trainin