Matthias
Gronemeyer, Stuttgart: VergeltÕs Gott?
†ber gerechte Entlohnung in sozialen Berufen
Social work has
much professionalised within the last decades. What once was Samaritan charity
or the housewifeÕs duty, has become a major economic factor in the western
world. The author treats two questions: a) what differentiates social from
economic work, and b) how can a just reward for social work be taxed? Starting
with the parable of the Samaritan, it is argued that social work is not
productive at all, but consumtive. Since there is no yield, at first sight no
wage is justified. Social work has no economic, but only moral ends. And
morality is no matter of exchange (Kant). The solution the author proposes is
threefold: 1) Since the social worker passes his chance for economic income
when healing (social) wounds, he shall be compensated (in the range of A. SmithÕs
limit of wages); 2) For social work is some sort of social internal labour, it
should be freed of all taxes and dues; 3) Jobs in the economy shall be opened
to social professionals.
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